When I was a teenager, I started drawing up mockups of a desktop interface designed to look clean and futuristic. When I learned about transform: skew()
, I recognized that it allowed me to make the parallelograms that formed the core of AirOS's design language, so I whipped up a quick mockup. It doesn't look good, and it's not supposed to--this was a gleeful reaction to the discovery of new possibilities.
Syncs up ranges in a Google Sheet (so, for example, a header is kept constant across the different pages but all can be edited).
Creates a custom sidebar that lists the names of each sheet in a workbook.
A script to ping all IP addresses on a network and return the successful ones. Helpful for finding wireless access points.
A script that pings a router frequently and indefinitely and logs outages to a text file.
Set up symbolic links to integrate The Chrome OS Downloads and Google Drive folders into Crostini containers
{% include_relative bookmarklets/bookmarklets.md %}
A simple puppet of Texas legend Buc-ee.
Display text in a cipher based on cistercian numbers
There are lots of online pianos out there, but they have issues--no offline support, and they're slow. So I built my own.
A response to a challenge to find a power of two that does not have a power of two as one of its digits. Has both webpage and node.js versions.
A simple snowfall animation. Scales to viewport.
A 3-pane web app layout inspired by study.churchofjesuschrist.org and messenger.com. Uses CSS grid to align everything. Side panels for navigation and details expand and contract based on the viewport width and user input.
My first attempt at a three-pane layout, using Flexbox.
A CSS animation that I developed for use as a logo.
An algorithm to rank a Wordle solution on a scale from 1-100