CrazyWebFoo

CrazyWebFoo

11p

7 comments posted · 0 followers · following 0

54 weeks ago @ Dumb Little Man - How to Start Your Morn... · 0 replies · +1 points

I find staying organized is the only way to get through my day. I use CalenGoo and Awesome Note (no affiliation) on my iPhone to keep up with life. I like the notes for things that are flexible (i.e. no hard date) and find it's really good to track goals. Also, as a freelance web designer (CrazyWebFoo Design http://crazywebfoo.com/), I keep a separate calendar for web development duties and client appointments. Good stuff!

100 weeks ago @ CrazyWebFoo Blog - OpenOffice.org - The F... · 0 replies · +1 points

I'll have to look into that! Thanks for sharing.

101 weeks ago @ CrazyWebFoo Blog - Logo SneakPeek: riders... · 0 replies · +1 points

Hi,

You should have a look at previous posts we\'ve written about hosting. You can get to them by click here - http://blog.crazywebfoo.com/tag/hosting/. Glad to help!

Cheers,
Steve

102 weeks ago @ CrazyWebFoo Blog - Fun with Interactive M... · 0 replies · +1 points

Thanks for the tip!

123 weeks ago @ CrazyWebFoo Blog - Fun with Interactive M... · 0 replies · +1 points

Old school design at its best!

123 weeks ago @ CrazyWebFoo Blog - Getting My Fix · 0 replies · +1 points

Best Buy is my last minute resort to my tech needs. I mostly use TigerDirect.com and sometimes NewEgg.com. Back when I was in IT our department used CDW quite a bit.

123 weeks ago @ CrazyWebFoo Blog - Fun with Interactive M... · 0 replies · +1 points

I've setup a preview area on my site so that clients can go there and interact with their site just like it was live. It helps me share with the daily progress with a client, which in turn, allows the client to interact with me while I build the site. In my past experience as a computer programming I was all too familiar with the term "feature creep." Early on I ask potential clients what they want from their site. Sticking to this idea helps to keep the focus on the original intent of the site. I think there's nothing wrong with implementing new site features in future stages. I suggest creating an outline early on with the client. Once they've signed off on the core concepts of the site you're free to focus on site design.