Hello, my name is Ross Tanner Curry and I am currently a senior in the Information & Communication Technologies (ICT) major. I arrived at UW-Stout as a Game Design and Development-Computer Science student and switched to Cross-Media Graphics Management (CMGM) the beginning of my sophomore year. What really caught my eye when deciding on something to change my major to was that CMGM was a mix between multiple different majors. I still felt like doing something with my computer science experience and also wanted to lean towards more of a business major as well, and Cross-Media Graphics Management allowed me to do that. At the end of my junior year, my focus was on web technology. CMGM has more of a concentration on print while with ICT I can concentrate more on web technology.
Check out my LinkedIn profile.
Check out my LinkedIn profile.
This is my main website. I have built several websites over time, and so I linked some of them from this site below. Some of them were built using Content Management Systems (CMS) while some were with Adobe Dreamweaver. When I first started out I used Notepad, then I learned about Notepad++ and was super excited with the color coding. An example of one of my first projects would be on the Calculus tab. Another small early on project would be the home page of http://teller55.net/ – I was focused on learning CSS and how various browsers need different code for some special effects.
http://curryr0699.stoutmartech.com/_old/ is an example website that I made for an intro HTML/CSS course. The website was created using Adobe Dreamweaver and hosted off of the professor's web server. On top of creating the website, I also used MailChimp and integrated a signup form for a newsletter on the website. (The home page is now on the "_old" sub-directory as the site had to be moved for another class. I have not updated all of the links, but the home page is running for that old site.)
http://cmgm.uwstout.edu/151/curry/index.html is another example of a website created using Adobe Dreamweaver in a previous class. I would say this website is a portfolio of much of what we did in that class. It gives information on what CMGM students do on the software side of things like Photoshop, Illustrator, InDesign, and Dreamweaver. On the Projects-->InDesign tab of the website, it shows a couple good examples of doing layout for projects. We were given the text and images and a picture of the final layout of what the finished piece was supposed to look like, and then we went and used InDesign to accomplish that goal.
As well as creating websites from scratch, I have also used multiple Content Management Systems to create websites. These would include:
• Jimdo: http://rosscurry.jimdo.com/
• Webnode
• WordPress
http://curryr0699.stoutmartech.com/_old/ is an example website that I made for an intro HTML/CSS course. The website was created using Adobe Dreamweaver and hosted off of the professor's web server. On top of creating the website, I also used MailChimp and integrated a signup form for a newsletter on the website. (The home page is now on the "_old" sub-directory as the site had to be moved for another class. I have not updated all of the links, but the home page is running for that old site.)
http://cmgm.uwstout.edu/151/curry/index.html is another example of a website created using Adobe Dreamweaver in a previous class. I would say this website is a portfolio of much of what we did in that class. It gives information on what CMGM students do on the software side of things like Photoshop, Illustrator, InDesign, and Dreamweaver. On the Projects-->InDesign tab of the website, it shows a couple good examples of doing layout for projects. We were given the text and images and a picture of the final layout of what the finished piece was supposed to look like, and then we went and used InDesign to accomplish that goal.
As well as creating websites from scratch, I have also used multiple Content Management Systems to create websites. These would include:
• Jimdo: http://rosscurry.jimdo.com/
• Webnode
• WordPress
The "Play rock, paper, scissors here!" JavaScript button was something I worked with back in high school, I believe.
I made the clock with the HTML5 canvas tag and JavaScript during the summer of 2016. |
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