Jun 16, 2009
I was reminded today at work that some people actually read my blog, so maybe it’s time for an update. Things have changed since March.
For starters: I’m in New York City, working at R/GA, a digital advertising firm in the Hell’s Kitchen area. They do all kinds of good work, for a lot of different brands. I’m on the tech team, doing front-end development, mostly Javascript and CSS.
Mar 17, 2009
Ach, it has been an unbearably long time since I last Jayeblogged. I promise, I’ll be back to it very soon. In the meantime, check out some of the stuff I’ve been doing.
My iPhone site is completed. Only viewable on Mobile Safari.
RITI Mobile is complete, too. It’s an improv game library and random word generator, and it’s really awesome. It’s technically viewable on a desktop, but you really want to use an iPhone or an iTouch for this one too.
I designed some print media for the new teas we’re getting at the Leaf & Bean. I’m very pleased with them.
Feb 5, 2009
Today, I looked at a whole bunch of .edu websites. I mean a whole bunch. Using Wikipedia’s List of American Institutions of Higher Education, I looked at the front page of every single listed college in Connecticut, Delaware, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, and Vermont. The final number of pages visited came to over six hundred—how my puny little internet connection managed to feed me all of that data in under three hours, I’ll never know. But I visited every single page, and I picked my top ten favorites of the whole bunch. Those ten are listed below.
Jan 28, 2009
Javascript sucks. I mean it really sucks. It sucks to code and it sucks to debug, it’s clunky, and the notion of Javascript cross-browser compatibility is a joke. I often ignored Javascript altogether in my early days, using the classic “well, a lot of users turn it off, so what’s the point?” argument to cover my ass. In the face of the latest W3Schools statistics, however, it’s clear that excuse no longer holds water—as of January of 2008, the W3C claims that up to 95% of their visitors are supporting Javascript in their browsers.
Jan 14, 2009
Jayeblog’s a bit dusty, and for that I apologize. Life is busy for a third-year undergrad, and I’ve had a string of false-starts the last few times I’ve sat down to write here. It’s something I’d love to do more often, but I’ve discovered a few bugs with my blogging process.
Most of the time I’m sitting down to write about some new project I’m working on. As soon as I start to write, though, I inevitably open up Dreamweaver and begin fiddling with the project instead of blogging about it.

