Web Application Design Samples: www.ebroselow.com
This is a brief overview of this application design which is called ebroselow or (The Color Coding Kids System). It is a weigh based medical system that will be used in hospitals around the county and possibly the world in the near future. This system was created by two well known doctors James Broselow, MD and Bob Luten, MD. They developed and patented their idea about 15 years ago. I first met them when I was contracted by my former parent company Vital Signs. I had to create some of their print materials such as manuals, booklets, tapes and other related medical devices that was designed to be used with this system. I started working on a design concept for this system to make it as user friendly as possible since this product was designed for an emergency situation when every second counts. These pages posted are live and up on a test server currently. All of the screens and XHTML, CSS code was designed and developed by me alone and I am now in the process of working with some back end developers since it will become a completely database driven site in the near future.
View live site: www.ebroselow.com
Web Application Design Samples: www.tcicredit.com
When I worked at tcicredit (Teledata Communications, Inc.) I got to work on various web based credit check and background checking software applications. At that time we were cutting edge with clean CSS and JSP pages. My roll was to design the look and feel, the login slash pages, logos, and the overall flow of all of the applications. I created all of the XHTML, CSS, Logos and graphic design elements using DreamWeaver, Photoshop, and Illustrator. We had roughly three different web applications but we had many front ends that I had to design since that one of our selling features for the software was customized front end to match the company’s needs. We had two generic interfaces and the rest were designed for larger clients like Verizon Wireless, Washington Mutual and Ford motor credit just to name a few. Below I have only screenshots for the front ends only since these applications were designed for private organizations in-house use only.