Emily Chang
Emily Chang | |
---|---|
Emily Chang 2005.jpg Emily Chang in 2005 | |
Born | Emily Yee Chang Fairfax, Virginia, U.S. |
🏳️ Nationality | American |
🎓 Alma mater | College of William & Mary |
💼 Occupation | Web designer, businesswoman, blogger |
🌐 Website | http://emilychang.com |
Emily Yee Chang is an American web designer, businesswoman, and blogger currently living in San Francisco. She is the co-founder of Ideacodes, a web design consultancy in San Francisco and the creator of the blog and web resource, EmilyChang.com and eHub.[1]
Background[edit]
Chang graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree from the College of William and Mary in 1995 and went on to pursue graduate work in fine art (sculpture, installation, mixed media) at the University at Buffalo. She graduated with a Master of Fine Arts degree in 2000. After graduate school, Chang became the first interface and information designer of the Electronic Media Unit at the University at Buffalo. She designed the interfaces and visual designs for all of the university external facing web presence, as well as working on the first student, faculty and alumni portal, known as MyUB. After a period of freelance design consulting, Chang took a position as Web Director at Cornell University, helping launch their first entrepreneur network online.[2]
Web design[edit]
In 2005, Chang co-founded Ideacodes in San Francisco with long-time partner, Max Kiesler. She has designed, produced and developed web sites, blogs, portals, networked communities, and web products for technology companies, educational institutions, startups, non-profits, art and media organizations and organizations such as IDEO, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 23andMe, Hewlett Packard, Stylehive, Gigaom, Six Apart, and the Sierra Club.
Chang is actively involved in social media and open source and continues to promote the work of others in the field through her active web 2.0 resource, eHub. In 2006, CNET Japan began translating eHub interviews with technology startups and entrepreneurs for a Japanese audience.[1]
Chang is also on the design and user experience advisory board for O'Reilly's Web 2.0 Expo [3] and was an invited judge for the 2008 Adobe Design Achievement Awards.[4]
Awards[edit]
In 2009, Chang was nominated for the Cooper Hewitt's National Design Awards in Interaction design. In 2008, Chang was listed among NxE's Fifty Most Influential Female Bloggers,[5] and acknowledged as one of the Top 50 Women in Technology by Go2Web.[6]
Chang's community art project, ADD (analog digital diary) was a finalist in the 2004 SXSW Interactive Awards.[7] Two University at Buffalo websites launched with Chang's interface designs and won consecutive Council for the Advancement and Support of Education (CASE) grand gold awards: the external eUB website redesign in 2002 and the alumni website in 2003. Her design of a university portal gained distinction as IBM Best Practices Partner and won the WebDevShare Award for Innovation in Technology in 2001. Her internet work has also garnered Web Marketing Association's best education website, numerous CASE awards, and a UCDA Gold award.
References[edit]
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 "特集 : 次世代ウェブの挑戦者たち from eHub Interviews".
- ↑ Chang, Emily. "Emily Chang – Designer » About".
- ↑ "Web 2.0 Expo New York 2011 - Co-produced by O'Reilly Media & UBM TechWeb, October 10 - 13, 2011, New York, NY".
- ↑ 2008 Adobe Design Achievement Awards Archived 2009-01-23 at the Wayback Machine
- ↑ NxE Fifty Most Influential Female Bloggers Archived 2017-12-11 at the Wayback Machine
- ↑ "Women in Technology". Archived from the original on 2012-07-07. Unknown parameter
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External links[edit]
This article "Emily Chang (web designer)" is from Wikipedia. The list of its authors can be seen in its historical and/or the page Edithistory:Emily Chang (web designer). Articles copied from Draft Namespace on Wikipedia could be seen on the Draft Namespace of Wikipedia and not main one.
- American women bloggers
- American bloggers
- American computer businesspeople
- American consulting businesspeople
- American technology chief executives
- American technology company founders
- American women chief executives
- Businesspeople from the San Francisco Bay Area
- Businesspeople from Virginia
- College of William & Mary alumni
- People from Fairfax, Virginia
- University at Buffalo alumni
- Web designers
- Web developers
- American women company founders
- Journalists from Virginia
- American women non-fiction writers
- 21st-century American non-fiction writers
- 21st-century American women writers