June 10, 2009

Website Labor For Hire

Filed under: BusinessTags: , , — darrenhe @ 12:48 PM

Of course this is not the best way to advertise, and I am doing so elsewhere – but I am looking for new clients! Please spread the word.

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April 12, 2009

HPROnline.org Completed

Filed under: Business, Coding, TechnologyTags: , , , — darrenhe @ 7:25 PM

I’ve just finished http://hpronline.org, the online version of the student publication Harvard Political Review. I think the site looks pretty nice, and it did take quite a bit of time to complete. The best thing the website has going for it is not merely the design, but a dedicated group of students who are willing to update the articles, pictures, and other content.

It’s true for any website – without useful, dynamic content, even the most attractive website will disappear into oblivion.

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March 31, 2009

Hopelessness

Filed under: College, TechnologyTags: , , , , , , , , , — darrenhe @ 12:31 PM

What do you do when you’re sitting there, unable to do anything, as a crisis unfolds?

This happened to me today, on a mini-crisis level – for a website.

Harvard09.com went down after the press release for our Class Day Speaker (Matt Lauer). At 11 AM, the fateful e-mail was sent out. Purportedly, most students were in class, but in reality this meant everyone was online. Hundreds of simultaneous clicks, and the Harvard Computing Society server goes down.

Server Error! Network taking too long to respond!

What was I to do? Sit there and wait for half an hour as the drama unfolded. As the class webmaster, I had to take responsibility. Chats and IMs poured in.

Is the website down? Who’s the class day speaker? Tell me pleaseeeee!

Who’s to blame? I suppose everyone, in a way. HCS for having not enough server resources. Harvard Alumni Association for not providing us with money to pay for a third-party paid hosting service. And of course myself for not predicting that this would happen.

A bigger problem still remains: half of the people who I’ve talked to asked, “Who the heck is Matt Lauer?”

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March 10, 2009

New Version of Website In Progress

Filed under: Blog Stuff, TechnologyTags: , , , , , , , , , , — darrenhe @ 5:21 AM

I’m making a new version of my website for a few reasons:

I’m going to see if I like a white background instead of a black one.
I need a better front page.
Change is good.

It looks pretty bad right now, I’ll fix it up in the coming days.

New site: http://darrenhe.com/
Old site: http://darrenhe.com/version1/

Suggestions are welcomed, of course.

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February 22, 2009

Working on a Flash Version of My Website

Filed under: Coding, TechnologyTags: , , , , , — darrenhe @ 4:37 AM

Flash Player

Ever see this annoying button before?

I believe that a good website should not be run on Flash. Sure, it can have trivial flash components, but not Flash for the menu, navigation, and content!

Nonetheless, Flash allows designers to make very visually appealing websites with effects that are not possible with simple HTML/CSS and either cumbersome or unfeasible with Javascript. Furthermore, there’s no need to tinker with stylesheets or test browser compatibility for hours on end.

So against my principles, I am experimenting with a Flash version of my website. It’s started off simple and redundant, but I will develop it more in my free time. The hardest part is of course the graphics. You can see my project at: http://darrenhe.com/flash.

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February 21, 2009

Yet Another Website Finished

I’m getting bored of these posts, since they seem to be every few days now. Wordpress-based site: http://www.hcs.harvard.edu/~hrec/.

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February 20, 2009

Changes to darrenhe.com

Filed under: Blog Stuff, Coding, TechnologyTags: , , , , , , , — darrenhe @ 4:54 PM

I finally am making some changes to my own website!

Logo has been changed and I have added a right side picture for people with big enough monitors to see it. Kat’s doing some graphics for me – I’m excited!

Also made some graphics for Services and Portfolio, and I’m thinking of replacing that rainbow thing on my home page to a flash animation. I only put it there to take up space anyways.

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February 18, 2009

Yet Another Website Done!

Just a day after finishing the HCCG website, I started and finished the website for the Harvard College Global Heatlh and AIDS Coalition (http://hcs.harvard.edu/hac/).

For this website, the users wanted to be able to 1) easily edit the static pages and 2) have a blog. My solution was to use Wordpress to maintain the entire website. Thus instead of integrating Wordpress into a website like I’ve done for my own website and for katherinejhan.com, I’ve done the reverse.

Used the pixeled theme from Wordpress, modified of course to make it suitable for a static content view. Best part is that non-code content changes are easy (and mostly done already!)

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New Website Done

Just finished the website for Harvard College Consulting Group (http://www.hcs.harvard.edu/hccg/).

Pretty straightforward website, simple CSS-based div design, with PHP calling the header, top menu, left menu, and footer. Google analytics integrated in the footer, and both the CSS and XHTML validated with W3C the first try!

Most importantly, it should be amazingly easy to edit for future classes of Harvard consultants! Just have to modify the page in question, and there’s a clearly visible div called “content.” Everything ugly is hidden in the PHP headers and footer. Yay for bloat-free, non-CMS websites!

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February 15, 2009

The Death Breath (Moan) of Newspapers

My younger brother, quite accomplished for a 17-year-old, is an intern at the Signal, the local newspaper of my California hometown area. His words to me were, “What do you know about social networking?” And now in a typical Web 2.0 format (GChat Archive + my slow responses):

11:44 PM me: it’s big
E: hopefully
i may develop something like that for the signal
using digg or something
11:46 PM me: what do you mean?
facebook for the newspaper?
E: something like that
12:23 AM me: i still dont understand how it will work
what will get ppl to use it?
or is it an internal thing?
12:26 AM E: dunno yet
well what will get people to read the signal?
12:27 AM given circulation <16k

My answer at the time was simply “good journalism.” I reasoned that despite the decreased interest in paper newspaper, the Signal could boost its online and paper readership with better writing rather than features and gimmicks. But after thinking about it more carefully, I realized that this might not be the case. Many people are on the computer with the primary purpose of enjoyment: reading “good writings” comes in as a secondary goal. While I can’t imagine why I’d join in a small, newspaper-run social network when I’ve already spread my social webs all over the place with Facebook, Twitter, and my blog, I do think that newspapers need to do something drastic to “survive.”

I put “survive” in quotes, however, because to survive implies that there is or was a risk of death. And to be at risk of death from a Darwinian/evolutionary standpoint means there is a failure to adapt and change. For newspaper executives to say that their industry is dying is to admit that they are helpless to change the machinations of a large but oh=so-last-century phenomenon. This does not have to be the case.

Yahoo! News ran an article today [link] on “wanted ’survival strategies’ for dying US newspapers.” The possible solutions include micropayments, hyperlocal news, and philanthropic schemes. Steven Outing calls for “voluntary monthly payments.” T.J. Sullivan calls for newspapers to go on a strike of sorts – shutting down online services to non-paying subscribers and letting people see what it would be like.

Epic fail, as Gen Y would say. These pundits and executives sitting around arguing about how to “survive” are as antiquated as their paper newspapers. For sure, they have the management know-how and business experience that they could only accumulate over many years of work. I am sure that if I tried to run a newspaper, I too would end in “epic fail”.

But this does not obscure their problem, or the problems with their solutions. Let’s look at some of them.

  • Micropayments: Not even close to a good idea. Do these executives realize how annoying it is to send payments on the internet, even with streamlined services such as PayPal and Google Shopping? I’d have to enter my credit card number and billing address to yet another website. I’d have to log in everytime I used the internet and send my financial information more than I’d like, even if there was a system that collected lump sums rather than individual payments. Reading the news on unsecure public computers is out of the question. And what about inspiring and educating the future generations? Severe limits – Jimmy has to go ask Daddy for his credit card number every time he wants to read the news from a different source.
  • Hyperlocal News: The Internet is already overcrowded with information. While all news must be taken with a grain of salt, hyperlocal websites must be taken with a cup of it. There is always an element of reputability that comes with mainstream news sources. Even if it were name-branded “New York Times Cambridge Massachusetts Select Local,” I’d think twice about reading it. And by the time I was on the second “think,” I’d be another bounce statistic on their website analytics.
  • Philanthropic Schemes: This does not represent a sound business plan on a large scale. It is true, Wikipedia receives a lot of user donations. But that is because it is representative and near-synonymous with free-speech and user contributions. People pay because they feel strongly about the cause and their right to participate, not because it is the best source of information.
  • Steven Outing’s Voluntary Payments: Good for small and medium sized online communities of dedicated individuals.. Not feasible for a large-scale, mainstream corporation. Just as I mentioned above in “Philanthropic Schemes,” this idea is noble but not a sound business plan. How many stores besides the thrift-marts do you see that advertise, “Name Your Own Price?” They’d be out of inventory in seconds and out of business soon afterwarsd, particularly in a down economy.
  • T.J. Sullivan’s Newspaper Corporation-Led Strike / Black Out: This is the most ridiculous idea I have heard to date. While I respect Sullivan’s journalism, this idea is simply ludicrous. Strikes are effective when they are led by the people, not by the corporations! When all the newspapers going on their “black out,” their strike-breaking competitors will see their traffic and Alexa rankings skyrocket! Consumers will be left with distaste, distrust, and a desire to never return to those “greedy business executives.”
  • Licensing Model, like Cable TV or Radio: Nice try, but still based off something decades-old. Whether the aggregator or the reporter gets the ad income does not matter from the point of view that the income must ultimately come from the consumer. Yes, you can print ads everywhere and collect my information, but you can’t block out my favorite TV channel or radio station. I have the power to click away. Honestly, I hardly see ads anymore. My Internet-trained eye automatically marginalized them. Try subliminal messaging instead.

What then, is my idea for profitability? I’m not sure – I’m an outsider, a bystander. I can witness an accident and tragedy about to occur, but that does not mean I can intervene.

However, I do know that it is not time for a newspaper bailout. Sympathy does not work in capitalism: look at our current bail-out fiascos. It is time to let the old style of newspapers and their corporations die. Good journalism will persevere, but not in the business format that it currently struggles in. Someone needs to rebuild the online news industry from the ground-up, rather than trying to bridge an old-style into the 21st century. Online news must be self-sustaining and reputable, with substantial user input. People don’t simply want to hear, they want to ask, to write – to join in. Why else would people like me blog for the public? I could just write in a private electronic diary otherwise.

Rather, the keywords to look out for are user-based, editor-filtered, free, reputable, and excellence. So many people are vying for my attention – dozens of online newspapers, fellow bloggers, nonprofit organizations, and for-profit businesses. You, Mr. Newspaper Owner, are not an AUTHORITY but a PEER, whom I rate with an extra star or two because of your journalistic training and track record. The Internet is about the power of the people, and you are free to try to make money off of it, but attempting to do so by taking that power away will either lead to 1) EPIC FAIL or 2) a worse-off world.

I am a supporter of businesses, and I hope that honest, reputable news finds a solid foundation for success in the online world. If I knew the answer, I’d have a Top 10 blog right now. If only.

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