1,608 reputation
317
bio website
location Brisbane, Australia
age 25
visits member for 2 years, 3 months
seen May 5 at 5:02
stats profile views 124

I am a web applications developer / programmer with experience in a plethora of web languages and frameworks. I am an avid user of the Codeigniter PHP Framework and the jQuery JavaScript framework.

I am a self-taught enthusiast with no formal qualifications, but has managed to score some awesome jobs over the last 3 years.


Feb
17
awarded  Yearling
Nov
27
comment How to be recognised?
I thought Frenchie's answer was helpful so I upvoted. Don't know why it was downvoted, all good online multiplayer games have a video showing off the game it's a tried and tested method of luring new players.
Jun
14
comment Do my prices make me seem unprofessional? Should I even list them?
Even one project is good if you can talk yourself up. Don't be afraid to exaggerate the work you've done previously if you're comfortable with what you're saying and can back the words up with your skills. I'm not ashamed to say I've over-embellished what I've done on some of my portfolio work pieces when vying for client work, I never go over my own head and say I did something when I obviously didn't. 3-5 projects is a more than ideal number and eventually once you do more projects you'll find you will only want to list the impressive projects and leave some of them out.
Jun
12
comment Do my prices make me seem unprofessional? Should I even list them?
Not really having any work will make it significantly harder. However, unless your employer objects you can usually list sites you've worked on via your employer as long as you mention that on your site it's what I do. I understand some employers don't allow that, but it's rare they don't unless you're doing secretive web projects. If not, you'll have to start small and work your way upwards. Everyone does a starting crap site or two with a troublesome client for little cash but once you have that experience you can raise the bar and be more picky/demanding with your clients and work.
Jun
12
answered Do my prices make me seem unprofessional? Should I even list them?
May
21
comment Server costs for video startup
Tell Instagram, Pinterest and a lot of other well-known startups using Amazon EC2 that cloud hosting is unaffordable. The complexities in buying your own machine, backing your data up, sharding your databases onto multiple servers is eased via cloud hosting. Cloud hosting virtually pays for itself once you encounter your first scaling configuration issues. It's easy to bump up your RAM than it is to open up a machine and replace the RAM in a data centre.
May
21
comment Server costs for video startup
The advantage of using cloud hosts if they do a lot of the heavy lifting for you. They take care of scaling for you (mostly). Owning your own servers is one thing, but cloud providers are great if you don't know what kind of traffic to expect. What's to say you build an amazing machine then find that the few thousands of dollars you spent wasn't enough? Most people don't have another few thousand to offload onto another server, then there's the issue of scaling your codebase and database across the multiple servers, not an easy feat for the non-technical minded.
May
21
comment Server costs for video startup
See my answer. Storage is only half of the picture here, you need a server just to process that data and you also need a database server that stores all meta info about the videos, users and other content, then you need a server for the static content.
May
21
answered Server costs for video startup
May
21
answered re-name product website pre-launch?
Apr
3
answered Co-founder wants to leave, do I pay him back the money he invested into the business?
Mar
23
comment Can I run a web-based Non-Profit Org while living abroad?
Great advice Krzysztof.
Mar
23
comment Should I blog with print, audio, or video?
I have voted to close this question, sorry. Questions about blogging are outside of the OnStartups FAQ.
Mar
22
answered Transfer of intellectual property due to use of a business equipment (Australian Law)
Mar
22
comment Does Google work with audio and video?
I also voted this as not constructive. This is not a startup related question at all. Definitely a webmasters question.
Mar
22
comment How to evaluate a lawyer?
@Karlson no worries mate. I just created a topic on meta, I could be over-analysing the validity of this question, as I'm sort of confused myself.
Mar
21
answered Microbrewing Commercially
Mar
21
comment How to evaluate a lawyer?
@NetTecture This whole question is useless. This site is meant to be about startups, yet this question is asking a subjectively vague question nobody can ever truly answer. From the FAQ itself: "Chatty, open-ended questions diminish the usefulness of our site and push other questions off the front page." this question needs to be closed, this is chatter and not beneficial to anyone.
Mar
21
comment How to evaluate a lawyer?
The real question here is how do you evaluate someone on something you know something about? Hardly see what the downvotes were for. The point wasn't all lawyers know the same thing, they all have a basic understanding of the law regardless of what they specialise in, much like all doctors & nurses learn the same thing until they specialise in something. If you have to ask how to evaluate a lawyer you'll most likely never know how to evaluate one. How do you evaluate a bad mechanic even if they fix your car and it works, how do you evaluate they've done things correctly if you aren't one?
Mar
21
answered How to evaluate a lawyer?