Pierre Bleile
Full Stack Web Developer
photo of me

About...

An adaptable self starter and problem solver capable of digging into problems to create elegant solutions. With a broad technical background rooted in electronics, and substantial experience in developing internal facing processes and software applications I have honed the ability to pick up and make use of new skills and technologies.
After many years in the VoIP telecommunications industry, I am opening a new path into full stack web applications.

Please take a look at the projects below that I've created in JavaScript, and Python in the Flask framework.

image of Portfolio project 'PhotoBomb!'

PhotoBomb! is a fully functional photo album repository and organizer. An intuitive user interface lets users use drag-and-drop to arrange photos into albums, and arrange the albums themselves. One can also attach useful information (titles, and descriptions) to albums and individual photos.

Technologies Used:



Visit PhotoBomb!
image of Portfolio project 'PizzaTime'

PizzaTime is a model web application for a fictional pizza restaurant, Black Belt Pizza. It features a customer facing website where customers create orders for custom built pizzas and pay by checkout. The app's restaurant facing website lets admins set the menu, and a kitchen dashboard features a live display tracks the progress incoming orders.

This project was a group effort with classmate Terence Stone. My role focused primarily on server back-end and database development.

Technologies Used:



PizzaTime Customer Site Restaurant Staff Site

Note: Use staff login "guest", password "123456"

These are some other interesting projects I did while at the CodingDojo boot camp:

NinjaMan A turn based pac-man like game written entirely in JavaScript and CSS. It features an auto world generator and chasing monsters. This was a pre-bootcamp assignment.

DojoTweets A message board where users can leave posts, follow other users, and leave comments and likes on posts.

WellSaid Users post famous (or infamous) statements, which are displayed on a "wall". Others can "like" them.