Cinema Website Public Beta

Filed under: Projects — Eike @ September 18, 2009 9:34 am

Working for Panorama3000 (with design work by Peter Ibder) I did programming work for the Cinema at Hackesche Höfe in Berlin and we have now put up a public beta at hoefekino.de.

The site is done with Drupal, with some added Ajax stuff; much of the effort went into importing data from their ticket reservation system.  Most important module were (obviously) CCK and views, plus imagecache and a few utilities (Date module and the like).

The site uses jquery and especially the “stylish select” plugin by Scott Darby and  jScrollpane by Kevin Luck (and both plugins are a pleasure to use).

This is still a work in progress so there will be glitches, but I think this already looks quite nice. Feel free to comment if you spot any errors on the site.

    Wordpress Quickies

    Filed under: Projects — Eike @ August 4, 2009 4:06 pm

    One cannot do big projects all the time, so here two small Wordpress sites I did recently.

    One is vidicon.de – a small tv and film production companythat so far has done mostly documentarys and is now entering the market for (if that is the correct word) corporate video. I admit I don’t like the splash screen myself, plus they are not quite finished entering  their project data so some of the pages look a little empty, but I still think it’s nice that these days you can build a video site from scratch within two or three days. The site uses Wordpress and the More Fields-Plugin (probably the most useful of WP plugins).

    Exihibit B is a page for a golf tournament (German Golf Championship for girls, which takes place at the Golf- und Land-Club Berlin-Wannsee e.V.) which is also a test of sorts for a new design – with Panorama 3000 I’m working on their new website). The site uses no plugins except for Frank Bültges Adminize (Frank Bültge is one of the german Wordpress heroes, and adminize is a great plugin to strip the WP backend of all unnecessary and potentially confusing options).

    And soon I will be doing a Joomla projectagain, this time for the Centrum Judaicum in Berlin ( a museum in the building of the old synagogue at Oranienburger Strasse). This is good news for mod_placehere users, since I will probably have to revise and improve the module code for the project.

      Queens Museum of Arts

      Filed under: Projects — Eike @ July 28, 2009 11:53 pm

      So it looks I’m going international  – this evening we launched the new Website for the Queens Museum of Art. Planning + Design is by Mike Murphy / deSIGN EVOLution. We still have to work out some details, and anyway that’s a work in progress (to paraphrase Kurt Tucholsky, now that we’re finished moving in with the furniture it’s time to look for a new home – we soon will be starting with upgrades) but for the time being I think that looks rather nice. And of course that’s New York we’re talking about – this kind of project looks really neat on my Curriculum Vitae.

        Jusos.de – new and improved

        Filed under: Programming, Projects — Eike @ April 24, 2009 1:13 am

        The “Jusos” (while Jusos stands for “Junge Sozialistinnen” -  “Young Socialists” most Jusos are actually not-quite-so-young Social Democrats) are the youth organization of Germanys Social Democratic Party. Freelancing for Panorama 3000 I did the frontend development for the new version of their website.

        Working on a pretty tight schedule we decided to publish the nearly feature-complete version of the page and to straighten out the remaining kinks (mostly accessibilty issues and some invalid HTML) in the background, but I’m already quite pleased with the result (but I would be, wouldn’t I).

        We switched the backend from Typo [1] to Drupal , which is less clunky and does not require anybody  to learn an otherwise useless scripting language [2]. Clientside scripting was used rather parsimoniously – a flickr badge, pulling a JSON feed from the associated blog, some accordion type of thing – but even so I was glad for Jquerys helpful selector engine.

        But the best thing about it (since money can provide only that much motivation) is that, despite all the pressure and everything, it was fun – that was such a brilliant team working on this project (you would be amazed how much ingenuity it takes to make a website look as simple as  this) and lots of wit and laughter and too much, too often asian food at lunchtime.

        Oh well then. Tomorrow I’ll take a day off and go motorbiking – I feel I deserve it.

        1. as far as I can work out Typos only advantage is that it satisfies the german penchant for overengineered solutions
        2. though naturally Drupal comes with its' own set of issues

        kakoii.de – Relaunch

        Filed under: Projects — Eike @ March 29, 2009 8:52 pm

        “kakoii” is obviously a japanese word that means something like “cool”, or “to the point”.  It is also the name of a small but fine graphics design & consulting agency in Berlin and, as I am their resident freelancer, today we launched a new version of their web site.

        Naturally they did their own design; CMS is Wordpress with a number of plugins (XHTML Video embed , the fantastic More Fields plugin ,  All in One SEO and XML Sitemap, and yes, I regularly do donate a bit to plugin authors).

        The javascript frame work used for a few simple but nice effects is mootools. We had planned for much more features, but at some point is seemed wiser to go online with what is already finished and add the missing bits over the time to come.

        I’m very happy with this site – I think the design looks great, and the project offered an interesting variety of frontend and backend tasks. There’re still some bits of fine-tuning to do  tonight (and probably won’t work on the more exotic browsers; please excuse that I won’t bother with Kazoo 0.2 on Slackware for Atari or something like that)  but all in all it’s a job well done, even if I say so myself.

          Sony Music is online

          Filed under: Programming, Projects — Eike @ February 5, 2009 1:56 pm

          In 2008 I did two large frontend jobs: as a freelancer for Neue Digitale/Razorfish GmbH I worked on the website for the german branch of the McDonalds-Franchise.  And working for Panorama 3000 I did the  frontend programming  for the new website for Sony Music (Germany), which was launched today.

          I have to say I’ much more proud of the Sony site; while it’s in many respects less sophisticated than the McDonalds site my own responsibilites were far greater – I was actually the man in charge as far as frontend developement was concerned, and I was allowed to make decisions about the markup  at my own discretion and leave it to the people at Sony to integrate my stuff with their CMS.

          Even so, and even with a somewhat generous budget, there were compromises, things that didn’t work as planned, or that I could have done better, or stuff that was added somewhat as an afterthought (and as of now there are some minor glitches  resulting from the transition from staging server to live server). And there were delays – while we were working Sony Music was heavily reorganised (when we started it was still Sony-BMG), so we launched a couple of months later than planned.

          But the nice thing is that in the end everybody was happy. The project manager at Sony Music is happy, my employers at Panorama 3000 are happy, and that much happiness makes me a happy show-off man myself.

            Shoa.de – Another Relaunch Approaching

            Filed under: Joomla, Projects, self referential, shoa — Eike @ October 30, 2008 12:49 pm

            For some four years now I volunteer as a webmaster for shoa.de, one of the largest german Holocaust ressource sites. I moved it from the original static HTML pages to Mambo and through various Joomla Versions. When I was finally prepared to give on Joomla version 1.5 came along with the wonderful beez template, and I decided to give Joomla another go. Tomorrow will be the official relaunch on a new server, and with a new name, too. Shoa.de will still work (it is after all the name of the registered non-profit), but the main domain will be  the not particularly original zukunft-braucht-erinnerung.de.

            I had hoped to make a bit of an event from the relaunch, but as things are going (I’m terribly busy and paid work goes first) I’m glad that I made it at all, and there are a lot of things left to do – the old page used tables for image captions that now need to be removed, some things (like pagination) are not styled at all, we purchased a cache component that I have been unable to get to work so far etc.  But still the new site is already looking much better than the old one, and now we have at least a solid base from which we can work our way towards accessibility.

            So, why I am doing this?

            Building or re-building a large website is a lot of work, even if you’re part of a team (graphics design was done by Thorsten Kaiser,  content editing is done mainly by shoa.de founder Stefan Mannes and his company kakoii.de and several other volunteers).

            It is occasionally speculated in online forums (what is the plural of “forum” ?) that shoa.de is either heavily subsidized by the german federal government or that we are paid for by the Israel Mossad as part of a mission to make the innocent german people feel bad about themselves.

            As they say, if I’m part of a conspiracy then where is my share?

            In fact that shoa.de runs at all is mostly by courtesy of Thomas Kochler from the hosting company schuko.net, who donated the server and pays for our traffic. If you are looking for reliable and competent hosting in Germany you should consider him, it’s a tad more expensive than the big companies but you will get excellent service. Then there are fees from the members of the non profit (it think it’s 15 Euro per year and member), we got a little money when the portal won an award two years ago, and we get the occasional donation (though that’s usually not money – for example various publishing companies donated prices for a school contest we arranged). And even if there was money the charter of the non-profit forbids that we pay money to ourselves.

            So if it’s not for the money why am I, why are we doing this ? After all the holocaust happened a long long time ago, isn’t it time to move on, put the memories to a rest, bla bla bla.

            The answer is rather simple. Nazism, fascim, antisemitism in Germany are not things of the past. Quite on the contrary, in some areas at least they seem to be on the rise. The problem are not so much the violent fascist thugs, even if they routinely maim or kill foreigners or lefties. After all there are laws against assault and murder, and Germany has a police force that would be quite capable to enforce them. The problem is a form of public acceptance – it is widely believed that the political views of Nazism are understandable and justfied, and that just its’ methods are a little bit too extreme [1].

            Well, I’m not going to accept it [2]. That Nazis should be allowed to go on while the people who are against Nazis should stop is, to me, unthinkable.

            That’s why.

            1. And of course in the aftermath of the german unification most of the left suffered a case of sudden spinelessness and converted to views that had been previously held only by the extremist right - "the boat is full" (so no more immigration), "we must protect our industry against jewish reparation claims" etc. So there is no real counterweight to the right anymore.
            2. And why would I? That the left are the losers of history is not because there is something wrong with being against nazis, or longing for a better world. It's because traditionally lefties are, in their majority,  wimps who would betray their every conviction and their comrades for a slap on the back from the right (Social Democrats, I'm looking at you). I don't have to do this to myself.

            New Joomla Project

            Filed under: Joomla, Programming, Projects — Eike @ June 28, 2008 8:29 pm

            In my last post I mentioned that I used the place here module for a new project – this is now online under www.freicon.de.

            Freicon (short for Freiburg Consulting) is one of the leading european suppliers for dealership management systems. We already did the last incarnation of the website running a patched version of Mambo. The new version is built with Joomla 1.5.3. I looted the Beez-Template for the parts responsible for HTML Output, but decided to use some much simpler CSS. The menus are done with ImgTTFMenu. The place here module (actually multiple instances of the modue) is in the grey box on the right and links to the respective categorys instead to individual articles.

            I did the programming work as a subcontractor for the Berlin-based agency dynamique (actually a company I co-founded a couple of years ago before I left; by now their main business is with hosted solutions for the Zimbra groupware), design was provided by smile-werbung.de in Freiburg.

              Wordpress Multiuser Project

              Filed under: Projects — Eike @ May 30, 2008 11:23 pm

              Europeans for Peace is a programme of the Foundation “Remembrance, Responsibility and Future” that promotes partnerships between schools or youth facilities from Germany and Central, Eastern and South Eastern Europe or Israel.

              Their website is done with a commercial CMS that is actually not half bad, but was developed when PHP 4 was state of the art, and is now slowly falling to pieces. Ever since I took over programming work ( I’m a subcontractor here – graphics design and project management is done by kakoii.de ) new functions are build with open source software.

              Europeans for peace currently supports about 220 projects. To improve outward communication for the projects we build a blogging plattform on top of the multiuser version of wordpress that was now tenetively to the public (currently there are only 4 blogs, in the course of time every projects will get it’s only blog).

              We recreated the old project archive as a WP plugin – if you do a project search you can switch from the projects detail page to the blog (example , use the tabs above the main content area) – and build a few custom plugins for the start page.

              That was a fun project, and I’m waiting to see how Wordpress mu will perform when this is actually used by many bloggers and visitors.

                So what else I’m doing

                Filed under: Projects — Eike @ May 12, 2008 9:44 pm

                I do not spend all my days working on Joomla modules and reading astronomy websites. Alas, sometimes I have to work for money (I don’t have as such a problem with work, but I rather work for fun than for money).

                I’m happy to report that one  project I was involved with – http://zeitzeugengeschichte.de/ – has been nominated for the rather prestigious Grimme Online Award, the second time one of ‘my’ projects won a nomination (actually this is a project of the non-profit http://www.metaversa.de under the lead of Birgit Marzinka) . Strangely enough I’m listed as graphics designer, which is not true – I adapted the CMS of the partner organization kanalb.org for the purposes of the project. The website is sort of only the tip of the iceberg – in the projects teenager learn how to conduct interviews with Zeitzeugen – contemporary witnesses of (at the moment) Nazi Germany (Metaversa plans to extend the project to cover the more recent german history), so much of the work is done offline. The site merely presents the result.

                Another project I worked on was not nominated for any prices, but was still very well received – the Berlin agency kakoii.de mounted a campaign (offline and web) for the Aktion Kinder- und Jugendschutz, a projects against violence against and amongst adolescents and children. http://www.du-kannst-entscheiden.de/ was build with Wordpress using a design provided by kakoii.

                And speaking of wordpress, a website and application for the non-profit Europeans For Peace that was build on the multiuser version of wordpress is currently in beta testing and will hopefully soon go public. I’m not necessarily a big wordpress fan, but if it’s used for it’s intended purpose and plugins are coded carefully it’s an excellent platform (I guess I should rather say I don’t think it’s a good choice as general purpose CMS).

                And then Im working on a small social networking application and on a museum website which will both be worth some further bragging when they go live….

                I’m a bit amazed myself; I went freelance out of necessity, not because I particularly felt like it back then, and I was a little afraid that I would have to work for Mom-and-Pop stores (nothing wrong with them except that they have no money). Instead I have assembled a rather impressive portfolio, even if I say so myself, and that doesn’t even include some big projects I’m not allowed to advertise.

                I guess I’m doing something right then.

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