We browse several websites a day. Thousands a year, perhaps. We know the ins and outs of navigating our way through drop menus, hyperlinks, text boxes, and many more functional objects and widgets created by web designers. What we don't know, however, is how these specific tools for our web access are created.
Josh Riess, a junior in the E-Communications, apart of the Web Design strand, is a proficient web designer.You may have heard of HTML, from changing the text color on your tumblr blog, but Java? CSS? xHTML? Maybe not. Riess, and most other web designers look to explore new ways to create fluid, simplistic, and easy to use websites for day to day people like you and I.
With just a few lines of text code, the very page you are reading this on has automatically converted it into a presentable article story, a sort of "behind the scenes" look at what the web really is. Our key, behind this door, is people like Josh. Humans and computers do not speak the same language, but with the help of Josh's lines of code, we have the beautiful, accessible, navigatable world wide web.
Below is a preview of some of Josh's work, his own personal blog in which he uses to showcase his work and updates to websites.
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