US Energy History Visualization
My first major project release was covered by the Atlantic! Learn how my colleagues and I prove that past energy transitions can be used to inform policy decisions and change the course of energy history.
read more →
My first major project release was covered by the Atlantic! Learn how my colleagues and I prove that past energy transitions can be used to inform policy decisions and change the course of energy history.
read more →
Learn how to use git bash aliases to open your project in VS Code, run your server, and open an incognito window in Google Chrome with just a few keystrokes.
read more →
http://us.infrastructure.rdcep.org
Since July 2019, I have been helping develop a data visualization that documents all long-lived infrastructure (> 20 years service life) associated with extracting, processing, transporting, and using energy in the U.S.
This grant-funded project is a partnership between the University of Chicago, DePaul University, the Center for Robust Decision-making on Climate and Energy Policy, and the National Science Foundation. The application is a visual companion to a paper describing the resource inventory in preparation for submission to Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
While we are engaged in a national discourse on the merit and practicality of large scale energy transitions, this project informs a relevant, data-driven approach to investigating the details. I am grateful for the opportunity to contribute to the research coming out of RDCEP. We will release our work as an open source project when we hand it off to the NSF, and I strive to keep the codebase easily scalable and maintainable for future developers. We are using vanilla JavaScript and D3.js on the client, and the application has a Python/Flask back-end.
https://giphy-synths.surge.sh
I built this with GatsbyJS and Node.js in the Spring of 2019 when I took an undergrad course on client-side JavaScript frameworks. During this course, I learned the fundamentals of making API calls and was first exposed to the node ecosystem. The app automatically loads and displays the latest GIFs tagged "synthesizer" at giphy.com.
You can download the app to your desktop or mobile device and use it offline. In Chrome, click the three dots in the upper right hand corner of the browser, and select "Install the Latest Synthesizer Memes." In Safari on iOS, tap the share icon and select "Add to Home Screen."
In February of 2019, I took a course surveying Human Computer Interaction and User Experience design where I spent some time studying the fundamentals of Interaction Design (IxD). I made a presentation on the basic design principles of discoverability, affordance, signifiers, mapping, feedback, and constraint. This activity allowed me to apply my understanding of Don Norman’s design principles to the domain of music gear, one of my lifelong passions. In addition to demonstrating my knowledge of foundational design principles, this project highlights my strengths in written communication and my knowledge of hardware and software synthesizers.
https://chakradvisors.com
During the first half of 2019, I worked as a developer & project lead with an Agile team of 5 to deliver a secure and stable Drupal 8 website to a remote financial services client located in the San Francisco Bay Area. This was a student volunteer effort to complete my senior capstone project at DePaul University. We rebuilt our client's existing Drupal 7 website from the ground up in a shared, cloud-based Linux development server, and the final deliverable can be seen live on the Chakra Advisors website.
I led the scrum team through one-week sprint cycles, facilitating all Agile ceremonies and guiding us through each milestone. Halfway through the project we found that a Kanban workflow was better suited to the needs of the project since the client's requirements were very clear. We developed a hybrid approach that allowed us to streamline our development process. I facilitated our Slack channel and kept it well-organized so that the team could communicate clearly and frequently, and I learned a lot about the importance of open and honest communication in an Agile development environment.