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Web Design & Development

Concept to completion.

Corporate
Identity

Revive your brand.

Graphic
Design

Advertise yourself

Social
Media

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About Me

As a New Media Designer with 8 years experience in my field I have successfully handled various tasks and design projects throughout my career.

I believe that the most innovative and effective work is the product of close working relationships with clients. This allows me to develop a clear understanding of their values, their ideas and their vision. My goal as a designer is to create compelling designs that capture a company’s story and express it in a way that resonates with their audience through various marketing mediums, from online to print.

Corporate & Brand Identity

Creating Corporate Identities entails giving a company a visual identity in the form of a logo which companies and public will use to differentiate them. Many companies undertake changing their logo’s or updating elements of their logo, ie font or shape design, to change or appeal to a larger target audience and keep up to date with the latest trend.

I offer the following services for existing and new companies:

  • Updating or refreshing current logos.
  • Creating logo’s from design to concept to application (business cards, letterheads, e-mail signatures etc).
  • Creating branding “bibles” which will show how the logo may and may not be presented across numerous mediums.

Graphic Design

Graphic design combines technology with art to convey a specific idea or message. There are various mediums ranging from creating images to print such as posters ,adverts and magazine, to product packaging. The final result is often created by using a combination of typography, visual arts and various page layouts.

Some of the Graphic design services I offer include:

  • Creating print advertising such as flyers, brochures, pamphlets etc
  • Creating online advertising such as banner ads, newsletters etc
  • Signage for buildings, parking, etc



Web Design & Development

Since 1989 when we were introduced to the World Wide Web, design and development has grown intensely, now offering more and more platforms on a daily basis. Our lives are run online now, from business and shopping, to communication in seconds via e-mail, social media and instant chat.

Here are a few of my specialty skills in this field

  • Web design from design and concept to development.
  • Pure CSS styled sites.
  • Various platforms : WordPress, Joomla, Drupal, Magento, Zend Framework.
  • Blogs
  • E-Marketing campaigns: Newsletters, e-mail blasts.

Social Media

Social media is the latest form of interaction and communication, useful on a private and business level. For many companies, this has become the best form of accessing their desired target market, as they are able to convey messages quickly, en mass, and cheaply.

Here are a few of my social media platforms I work with

  • Facebook page creation.
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn

Bing up, Google down in latest search rankings

by Lance Whitney

Though Google is still king of the search engine arena, Bing is creeping up, according to a report released yesterday by market researcher Experian Hitwise.

Looking at the global search engine market in January, Google took home almost 68 percent of all searches. But that marked a 2 percentage point dip from December. The number of searches run at Bing.com and Bing-powered sites collectively rose by 6 points, giving Microsoft’s search engine a 27.4 percent cut of the market.

Breaking down the Bing results, Bing.com by itself accounted for 12.8 percent of all searches, a 21 percentage point jump from December. Searches conducted at Yahoo sites powered by Bing slid 4 points, giving those 14.6 percent of the market, said Experian Hitwise.

Further, Bing and Yahoo combined outscored Google in January’s success rate, which indicates the number of search results that actually triggered a visit to a Web site. This rate is considered key as it measures not the quantity of searches but rather the accuracy and relevancy of the results returned. For the month, Bing/Yahoo scored an 81 percent success rate, according to the data, surpassing the 65 percent rate achieved by Google and virtually the same as the rates in December.

Read more: http://news.cnet.com/8301-10805_3-20031183-75.html#ixzz1DdClJ7Ho

Wired world needs more IP addresses

By Alexei Oreskovic

San Francisco – Thirty years after the first Internet addresses were created, the supply of addresses officially ran dry on Thursday.

But don’t panic. The transition to a new version of addresses is already well under way and, for most people, should occur without even being noticed

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At a special ceremony in Miami on Thursday, the organisation that oversees the global allocation of Internet addresses distributed the last batch of so-called IPv4 addresses, underscoring the extent to which the Web has become an integral and pervasive part of modern life.

Every computer, smartphone and back-end Web server requires an IP address – a unique string of numbers identifying a particular device – in order to be connected to the Internet. The explosion of Web-connected gadgets, and the popularity of websites from Google to Facebook, means that the world has now bumped up against the limit of roughly four billion IP addresses that are possible with the IPv4 standard introduced in 1981

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Read more: http://www.iol.co.za/scitech/technology/internet/wired-world-needs-more-ip-addresses-1.1021274

Google offers £12,500 and a laptop to the first person to hack its Chrome browser

By Graham Smith

It’s a move that reeks of extreme confidence, bordering on the reckless.

Google is so certain its Chrome browser is unhackable it has promised to award £12,500 ($20,000) and a notebook to the first person who proves them wrong.

The company laid down the gauntlet ahead of the fifth annual Pwn2Own hacking competition next month.Gauntlet: Google is so certain its Chrome browser is unhackable it has promised to award £12,500 and a laptop to the first person who proves them wrong.

Its award is the largest ever offered at the challenge, which takes place at the CanSecWest security conference in Vancouver, British Columbia, on March 9.

Using machines running Windows 7 or Mac OS X, researchers will try and hack into Google Chrome as well as Microsoft’s Internet Explorer, Mozilla’s Firefox and Apple’s Safari browsers. Microsoft, Mozilla and Apple have each offered $15,000 to the first person who can crack their browsers’ security – $5,000 more than was given to the successful hackers at last year’s event.

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-1353728/Google-offers-12-500-laptop-person-hack-Chrome-browser.html#ixzz1DGm05ZoQ

Microsoft warns of security flaw that ‘affects 900 MILLION people using Internet Explorer’

By Daily Mail Reporter

Microsoft has issued a ‘critical’ security alert that affects 900million people using its Internet Explorer web browser. The computer giant warned of a newly-discovered flaw in Windows that could be exploited by hackers to steal personal details or take over computers.

The glitch is so severe it potentially affects every user of Internet Explorer.

Firefox, Google Chrome and Safari browsers are all unaffected by the threat because, unlike Internet Explorer, they don’t support MHTML files, where the problem lies.

The loophole only seems to affect the way Internet Explorer handles some web pages.Microsoft just said that the bug is inside Windows, presumably because they don’t want users to migrate to other browsers. This means it affects all versions of the operating system currently supported including Windows XP (SP3), Windows Vista, Windows 7, Windows Server 2003 and Windows Server 2008 (R2).

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-1352271/Microsoft-security-flaw-affects-900m-people-using-Internet-Explorer.html#ixzz1Chy9mvW6

The Google killer: New search engine Blekko to change how we look for things on the web

By Daniel Bates

A new Internet search engine which relies on recommendations from other users has been launched and hailed as a ‘Google killer’.

Blekko filters out poor quality and irrelevant websites which its founders claim have overrun the web and dominate search engine results.

It works by using humans to pre-select the most useful sites on key topics and then limit searches to those alone.

So-called ‘content farm’ websites which are manufactured to score highly on searches but have little real information will be weeded out, as will pornography and spam.

Blekko uses ‘slashtags’ to organise search and has a list of trusted sources it checkssources it checks.

According to Blekko’s founder Rich Skrenta to goal is no less than to ‘clean up web search and get all the spam out of it’.

On Blekko users can search using a word such as ‘global warming’ and come up with results as per usual.

Where it differs is with the use of ‘slashtags’, or different words separated by a slash.

If a user searches ‘global warming / green’ it would bring up only environmental websites to do with green groups or issues.

Similarly a search for ‘Paris Hilton /noporn’ would avoid any pornographic websites associated with the Hilton heiress.

Slashtags can be combined for more accuracy so a search like ‘global warming / date / technology’ which would bring up web pages about global warming and technology companies ranked by date.

Blekko’s 8,000 ‘curators’ have made hundreds of slashtags already and users are encouraged to make more of their own.

The idea is that, in a similar way to Wikipedia, users will add and edit search results, chopping irrelevant choices here and keeping relevant ones there.

As such, users can apply to be editors as well as share their comments and feedback.

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-1326953/Blekko-New-search-engine-hailed-Google-killer.html#ixzz1C3Tgu5MV

Five Things That Will Keep Shaping The Web in 2011

by Dave Sparks

1. Flash


Flash? I can hear people seriously questioning my mental state right now. How can Flash be a major influence this year? “But…but…but Flash is fighting to survive amidst HTML5 APIs,” you must be saying to yourself. But that is where the key is.

If Flash does die, it will die fighting. And, as we all know, the best innovations happen when companies are fighting for their survival. Think about how Apple almost went bankrupt in the 90s, and now they are industry innovators with products such as iTunes, iPad, Macbook Air, and iPhone.

I doubt Flash will ever vanish from the web completely, even amidst open technologies like JavaScript and HTML. With this battle ahead, Flash must prove its worth; it must innovate, stand up, and say, “Look, this is what I can do for you that HTML5 and JavaScript won’t be able to.”

Adobe, the company that owns Flash, knows that it’s under serious threat against open HTML5 APIs such as canvas, audio, and video that leverage JavaScript for creating rich media components with animation and dynamic drawing capabilities — an area that their product has been primarily fulfilling.

Because of this realization, they’re one of the first companies working on creating an HTML5 editor/IDE, starting with their HTML5 prototyping tool (codenamed Edge). They have also incorporated HTML5 canvas-exporting capabilities in Flash CS5.

Adobe has continued the development of Flash to increase its performance, especially on mobile devices with the release of Flash Player 10.1 for mobile devices. Expect to see something out of Flash this year, whether its innovation, a repurposing of the technology, or a significant drop in usage.


2. Print Media


I regularly pick up and read a newspaper, but it would certainly be true that I am among a declining number of people who are doing so.

An industry that has significantly influenced and inspired web designers and content-driven websites (such as blogs, for example), the traditional print medium is under threat. But it’s fighting back.

Among those under threat are print companies that produce content in a more disposable form, such as newspapers and magazines where speed and timeliness is crucial.

From paywalls to mobile apps, companies in the printed world are exploring ways to adapt to the web so that they may continue delivering the quality content they’re known to produce. If The Times, for example, can make their paywall work, then don’t be surprised to see other similar print media companies throwing up paywalls across the web and potentially influencing the culture of free content on the internet.

A big area where newspapers and magazines are focusing on is the Mobile Web. Reading a magazine on the desktop isn’t that great of an experience, but sitting with an iPad while you have your morning coffee and breakfast can easily compare to the experience. iPad apps, accompanied by subscription-based payment models, are seen as the key focus for a number of print media outlets.

It’s not just a case of traditional media being ported to apps either; the first iPad-only magazine, called Project, has already been released.

As traditionally print-based companies feel the threat from the internet, we might see innovations in the ways their websites seek monetization and revenue. Even content-driven sites, already increasingly less reliant on internet-advertisement monetization, may take cue from a medium that has heavily influenced their own. We have seen recently, for example, the Tuts+ network, which got its start on the web, offering subscription-based premium content much like The Times and the New York Times paywall.


3. Hardware-Accelerated Browsers


Described as the “next frontier of the browser wars,” by ReadWriteWeb, hardware acceleration is set to bring a whole new realm of speed to your browser. Opening up previously untapped processing power in your computer will enrich our browsing experience.

Widely touted by Microsoft in IE9, hardware acceleration (or hardware-accelerated browsers) is set to improve the power and speed of your browser, boosting the performance of rendering times, JavaScript performance, and HTML5 animation, audio, and video performance.

And it’s not just IE, Google Chrome and Firefox are coming out with their own hardware-accelerated browser features. Google Chrome, for example, has Tabpose and other GPU-accelerated compositing features in the works. Likewise, Firefox 4 has full hardware acceleration.

From a user’s perspective, we’re set to see improvements in the speed and quality of graphics rendering. The ability to utilize hardware more fully will mean an even richer web experience.


4. Television


Watching TV on the internet and accessing the internet on your TV are the two primary ways the internet and the television industry are working together. TV on the web is already on demand with web services such as Hulu, Netflix, Fancast, and BBC iPlayer.

TV advertising revenues will inevitably drop as people increasingly watch their shows on demand rather than at their scheduled time with the programmed ads. Bandwidth is also an issue: Streaming HD video through the internet can be taxing on internet service providers.

The second focus is having the internet on your television set so that you can watch streaming video on your awesome flatscreen TV while taking advantage of the web’s interactive and socially-networked features. We have Apple TV, Google TV, internet-capable TVs, and gaming consoles such as Xbox, PlayStation, and Wii; the number of options for getting the web in your TV is near endless.

Expect industry leaders to investigate new compression and encoding technologies to assist the speed and file size of delivery of TV through the web. Expect even more innovation in the TV/web space this year.


5. Location-Based Services


The internet no longer sits on your desktop, and everybody from your kids to your grandmother uses the internet. You carry the internet around in your pocket, in your laptop or netbook, and in your tablet; it’s only natural that technology companies will want to take advantage of this.

Facebook has stepped into the space last year; and now, they already have over 100 million Facebook mobile users. Gowalla rolled out their latest iteration not so long ago, along with some very interesting features that highlight the power of location-awareness. The Notes feature in Gowalla, for example, allows users to leave notes about a particular location that a friend can pick up when they visit the area (e.g., “Dad, don’t forget to pick up milk when you come here to Costco”).

There are now also plenty of “near me” applications such the SoleSearch iPhone app that uses GPS data to show you boutique sneaker retail stores near you (the app was initially built by shoe enthusiasts/entrepreneurs with no programming experience). The task management iPhone app, Omnifocus, shows great use of location awareness by allowing you to create tasks with specific locations so that your to-do lists have improved context that can increase your productivity.

We’ll see more location-aware apps that will serve you relevant information and features depending on where you are at any given moment. Combine location-aware features with other upcoming technologies such as barcode scanning, book cover recognition, Google’s speech recognition API, and augmented reality — and the possibilities suddenly becomes countless.

No doubt, an increase of pushed, location-aware content for smart phones and similar devices informing you of nearby points of interest will only rise in popularity. We’ll also see content tailored to your current location while you browse websites on your mobile phone, and even more innovation focused in this space.





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