I don't know how to react, but at least I want to say this: the name and the layout remind me a little too much about <a href="http://www.prtfl.io/muellerwolfram/projects" rel="nofollow">http://www.prtfl.io/muellerwolfram/projects</a><p>I'm not sure what to say, I mean, it's a free web, you can do whatever you want, but it leaves a bitter aftertaste, especially because i know that you knew about prtfl.io
I'm not a developer but a designer.<p>What do developers showcase in their portfolio? How do you describe the projects you've worked on? What is a recruiter looking for when visiting your website?
Great work, thanks for sharing this.<p>Feedback -<p>- I'm a fool and was looking around for somewhere to click to go through to my site - what about a small link somewhere around <a href="http://d.jdkram.net/W7nY" rel="nofollow">http://d.jdkram.net/W7nY</a>? Or maybe a second button the "Welcome" tab.<p>- Hovering over all of the entry titles in 'Account' (Facebook, Google+ etc.) switches the cursor to a hand. Apologies if this is intentional.<p>- It would be nice to have a little explanation regarding what you're asking for in the box: something like <a href="http://d.jdkram.net/4GEL" rel="nofollow">http://d.jdkram.net/4GEL</a> would help keep the look clean and let you explain where to get the info you're asking for. Alternatively continue with your current norm and use greyed out text within the boxes saying "e.g. 107633175658115732197".
A bunch of UX feedback/issues:<p>- after signing in/up, there is no link on any page that actually links you to your portfolio.<p>- The welcome page is a waste of space right now. It only has a link to give you feedback, while providing the user no useful information.<p>- If you're making me sign in with github, the projects section shouldn't be empty. It should pull from my github<p>- Under Theme, I understand it's probably more work than it's worth right now to preview the themes for a weekend project - but the link out to bootswatch should at least go to the preview so I know what I'm choosing: <a href="http://bootswatch.com/#gallery" rel="nofollow">http://bootswatch.com/#gallery</a>
I like it, a lot. I never had much or was proud of my personal website, so for fun I pointed my A records over to my brand new shiny website at prtfl.io. It's waynepierson.com ( <a href="http://wpierson.prtflio.eu/" rel="nofollow">http://wpierson.prtflio.eu/</a> if the changes haven't propagated yet to your neck of the woods, but CloudFlare is pretty good about that)<p>I also got a little carried away, wrote out my about page, and even wrote three blog posts. Yes three. I'm a fan.
Like it ! :) I decided to give it a try. It's now up and running on <a href="http://nicolasgrenie.com" rel="nofollow">http://nicolasgrenie.com</a><p>I could be awesome to get automatically the projects from Github.<p>And also being able to re-arrange the order of projects. I personally want to arrange them chronologically and also edit them.<p>Hope you will continue to dev it. The good thing to know : there is a need for this kind of solution :)
One small flaw: the columns have huge gutters at high resolutions. Example:
<a href="http://i.imgur.com/BJD5N8o.png" rel="nofollow">http://i.imgur.com/BJD5N8o.png</a><p>The image example is for effect, but it does look goofy at 1980px viewport width too.
i feel its better to build you own, if its your personal website, and you're a developer. this seems like the easy, lazy way out and shows that you don't have time to make a custom site for yourself to show off your talents.<p>i can see this idea being used for other professions, but if you're a dev, then i feel your website is a free pass to show off your true skills, creativity..<p>either way, great job.. keep developing