So, I really enjoy web development. I still remember the very first time I was exposed to the internet at a computer fair, while I was studying abroad in the United States during my high school years. The guy at the fair was showing off the internet to attendees, and all I thought was “why, gee, that’s so neat. It’s as easy as browsing through a Windows help file” – and with that grew my interest in web development. To finance my way through college, I started working at this Dilbert-like dot com business designing and creating websites for small businesses. That was still in the days of “if you build a website selling X – they will come.” (where X can be replaced with any word you can find in the dictionary). Upon graduating from Berkeley in 2001, my first job was with a printer driver company, but my focus was a web portal, including some 3D rendering of printers using VRML (how cool was that). My second job was focusing on library web portals with some heavy DHTML scripting. When I joined Expedia.com I was doing heavy web development of course, and I was originally hired by Microsoft to do web-based work for the TV. Though my focus at work has broadened a lot to cover many areas, my passion still remains with user interfaces. So, it’s of no surprise that combined with my other passion for community work, I spend a lot of time volunteering to create websites for non-profits or other organizations that I believe in or support. With that, I present to you a list of selected websites that I have designed/written/maintained in the past. It’s a surprise to me that some of them are still around. Consider it my Mini-portfolio. No, I am not for hire, and yes, I am fully aware that I need to take a graphic design class some day to complement my technical skills.