Behind The Avatar - Jack Franklin

Today I will be starting a new feature here on the blog in which I will introduce you to people and blogs and websites who I have found to be of value to my education and life experience. Whether I follow them on Twitter or subscribe to their blog’s RSS feed or have interacted with them in some other way, these are people that I am getting to know and want to encourage you to do the same. In keeping with the spirit of previous posts on this blog, I want to try to bring to the forefront those that for one reason or another are not as well known as some of the more “popular” in their field.

This feature will appear at least once if not more per week. When I am recommending someone on Twitter it is a direct replacement of my previous #FollowFriday posts that I used to do each week, thanks to the bit I wrote a couple weeks ago about #FollowFridays Are Like Flowers At A Funeral. That got me to thinking I should recommend others as I am inspired by them, rather than waiting until Friday. Then I decided to expand outside of the Twitterverse and include many others that are becoming a part of my online life in some way.

The idea here is that there are countless avatars and websites and icons and blogs. But every single one of them has a person or people behind them. Get to know the person a little bit and you will be all the more interested and invested in what they have to say and share.

Jack Franklin's AvatarSo today I am pleased to introduce you to Jack Franklin, a 17-year-old web developer who was born and raised in Falmouth, England. This young man got into coding at about 13 when his dad decided to start a part-time Web Design firm. He taught himself HTML and CSS before getting bored, and then moved onto PHP.

“I guess what I liked so much about PHP is that you know that the entire website is working on your code. It also means I can customize third-party applications much more, being able to decipher the code and then rewrite it so most times I can get anything to do exactly what I want it to (with a bit of a struggle in between, possibly!)”

Jack is currently at College studying A-Levels in Math, English and Computing in the final year of two spent at college. After Uni he doesn’t really know what he wants to do, but he’s hoping to land a job as a junior developer at a web firm or something before deciding in which direction he wants to go.

“I’ll hopefully, if my grades hit what they should, be headed up to Bath University (where the Carsonified guys hang out!) to study Computer Science there for 4 years, with one of those years being in the industry.”

Besides HTML, CSS and PHP, Jack has also taught himself Javascript, which he says “is great fun, as it gave me an excuse to play more with front-end stuff, and also led me to jQuery, one of the best Javascript libraries out there.”

Jack has recently taken the position of Editor of the magazine/blog at TheWebSqueeze.com, a “useful resource filled to the brim with web design articles on business and computers to web development tutorials on topics such as CSS, PHP, Javascript and much more.” Here’s how he tells the story of working his way into that position:

“I started writing for a (now gone) magazine called Creative Coding and ended up as the Assistant Editor there. In early 2008 it all fell apart and the Editor of the magazine and some very influential people (@lchad, @karinne and @JacobHaug) left to form The Web Squeeze. I stayed in touch but it wasn’t until a bit later on, desperate for cash (as all students are), I started doing the odd article for them. I focused mainly around jQuery but also branched into some HTML, CSS and PHP from time to time. It became clear that people liked reading my tutorials and that folks like The Web Squeeze were happy to publish them.  I started writing more and more until just a few weeks ago they started looking for someone to be the editor of their magazine/blog. So I went for it – kind of my dream job – getting to write my own articles but also help others do the same and get the same joy out of it as I did. A few days later, deep into the night I was told I managed to get the position. Since then it’s been great, I’ve been much more motivated to write articles and the magazine is growing in popularity with every passing day.”

Jack

Jack started using Twitter when he started doing more development work. He says “it was fantastic to get advice and help when I was just starting out with PHP and Javascript – although I’m sure I must have pissed a few people off!” I don’t know about those early days, but I know since I’ve been following him he has been interesting, entertaining, funny and helpful. He also writes really useful tutorials.

Jack, Mom and brother Sam

Jack, Mom and brother Sam

Jack currently has dreams of reaching 1,000 followers by Christmas. Would you consider checking out his profile and following him to give a nudge to his holiday? Also be sure to check out his self-designed typography-based site at http://www.jackfranklin.co.uk, where you can see his portfolio and latest projects, including get2meet.me, the first site to act as a social feed aggregator (yes, the very popular card.ly and myonepage.com came into existence a few weeks after this one). Finally, pay a visit if you haven’t already to TheWebSqueeze.com. I subscribe to their feed and find lots of useful web development information, tutorials and a helpful forum.

If you are interested in being interviewed as a part of this series, please let me know in the comments, or send me an email. If you have any questions or comments for jack, be sure to comment below. Finally, if you are not already, would you consider subscribing to this blog so you don’t miss any future updates? You can either subscribe to the RSS feed in the reader of your choice or you can receive the blog updates along with my Delicious bookmarks in your email inbox by filling out the simple little form at the top right of the page.

Thanks for taking the time to get to know Jack. I’m sure that if you start to follow him a little more closely from this point forward you will enjoy him as much as I have.


Comments ( 16 )

[...] Behind The Avatar: Jack Franklin – 17-Year-Old Web Developer and Editor of The Web Squeeze [...]

40+ Worth Investigating Fresh Articles for Designers and Developers | tripwire magazine added these pithy words on Oct 15 09 at 3:49 am

[...] Behind The Avatar: Jack Franklin – 17-Year-Old Web Developer and Editor of The Web Squeeze [...]

40+ Worth Investigating Fresh Articles for Designers and Developers | Master Design added these pithy words on Oct 17 09 at 6:52 am

[...] Today I am pleased to introduce you to Jack Franklin, a 17-year-old web developer (PHP, HTML, CSS, Javascript) who was born and raised in Falmouth, England. Feed found here.. [...]

Web Development Blog – Web Developer OPPORTUNITY / Cloud & Online Ad Tech Start-up at … - Affordable Web Developer - Just another WordPress weblog on Affordable open source web development. added these pithy words on Oct 20 09 at 10:20 pm

[...] Behind The Avatar: Jack Franklin – 17-Year-Old Web Developer and Editor of The Web Squeeze [...]

Behind The Avatar: Jack Franklin – 17-Year-Old Web Developer and Editor of The Web Squeeze | Design Newz added these pithy words on Oct 23 09 at 8:31 am

Wow! I love this article! What a brilliant guy!

[Reply]

bkmacdaddy Reply:

I thought he was pretty impressive myself. All I was interested in at 17 was girls. :P

Thanks for the comment!

[Reply]

nOeL added these pithy words on Oct 14 09 at 7:43 am

Thanks Brian for the interview and nOel for the comment.

PS – one mistake Brian, I’m at College right now studying, not Uni ;)

[Reply]

bkmacdaddy Reply:

Hehe…I didn’t know they were 2 different things (yank that I am). Just changed it. :P

[Reply]

Jack F added these pithy words on Oct 14 09 at 1:05 pm

Great interview! I also like that you are promoting some of the lesser known talents in the industry!

[Reply]

Linda Chadbourne added these pithy words on Oct 14 09 at 1:22 pm

Great interview! Jack is amazing for his age, mature, smart…..etc! In fact, I would go as far to say, he’s better then most developers twice his age!

Nice pick! Look forward to reading more posts on your blog!

[Reply]

Jacob Haug added these pithy words on Oct 14 09 at 1:25 pm

Yay Jack! I agree with Jacob. If I was at where Jack is now at his age (did that come out right?) I would be bragging to the world. I’m glad Jack got to see some face time! It’s very well deserved!

[Reply]

Mike Sweeney added these pithy words on Oct 14 09 at 4:10 pm

Very cool idea, Brian! Seeing this reminded me to get on the stuff i promised you by weeks end! :) Thank you for asking me to be a part of this, it’s a great idea and I look forward to seeing more from this series.

[Reply]

Liz added these pithy words on Oct 14 09 at 5:00 pm

Brian, the idea is awesome, just like all your ideas. Jack, you’re cool, I’ll follow you ;) I’m always inspired by people who started coding at 13-15 years old, they’ve got the power. Keep up the good job and good luck!

~ @kovshenin

[Reply]

kovshenin added these pithy words on Oct 14 09 at 5:33 pm

what an amazing child. Web development approached me in a very young age as well (15 to be exact) but I am still far away from the skills this kid has.

[Reply]

Fenson added these pithy words on Oct 14 09 at 6:16 pm

well i started my web developing career when i was 16

[Reply]

Romi added these pithy words on Oct 14 09 at 8:07 pm

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