Blog blurb

This blog is the resting place of my various projects. It's a place to find out about my various commercial and personal projects. Some of them are quite geeky and some of them are more arts based. All my projects are a small subset of all my ideas for projects. There's not enought time really.

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Richard's weather

sunny

Richard in Leeds is mainly experiencing sunny intervals.

The new Oxfam website

05/07/2008

Screenshot of the new Oxfam site

My last project has been my most high profile since I went freelance. So, I'm excited to announce that it went live this week. The website in question is the new Oxfam International site.

I was working with Fortune Cookie, DGF Solutions and the web team at Oxfam. I was responsible for implementing Fortune Cookie's designs using Drupal and PHP. I worked with the Oxfam team to move a huge amount of content from their old site to the new site. I also gave training to the Oxfam editors on how to use their new Drupal Site.

It was a very challenging project, particularly making it multilingual. I think we really pushed what Drupal can do to make a site with a lot of features. It was great to be involved on such a great project and I think the final site is excellent. I really hope people enjoy it.

RichardGComments: 0

The National Pensions Debate

20/03/2006

Screen shot of the on-line pensions debateI loved working on this project. There's something about having a impending ministerial deadline that gets everyone focused. It's one of the few times I get to concentrate on one project and can do it really well.

John Hutton, Secretary of State for the Department for Work and Pensions was holding a series of debates and discussions around the country. This was to be backed up by an on-line consultation survey asking the wider public's opinion.

The questions had been prepared for us and it was down to my team to present them in the best way possible. I designed the survey interface and pair programmed it with David Joseph.

The survey was created using PHP. There were nine pages of questions. Each page validated itself, the answers were collected at the end, and then posted to another server.

The questions, their order and the type of answers were constantly changing right up to the deadline. We created validation routines that were generic enough to cope with this really well. It also means they can be easily reused on future surveys.

This Guardian article talks about the on-line debate before it was live. On the day this BBC article talked about the national events and linked to the debate site. We knew the BBC were going to write about us, and I was a bit disappointed they didn't make a bigger deal of my survey.

The survey was only live for a short time. I'm hoping we'll get to do more on-line consultation stuff. I think there are a lot of exciting possibilities.

RichardGComments: 0