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19SIXTY5

About

 

About

Professional Summary

More than 20 years of professional creative experience
Creative team lead with results oriented, goal-driven, collaborative & agile style
Published author, experienced speaker/presenter & design mentor
Interaction design thought-leader & passionate user-advocate
Years of teaching experience at the college level
Key focus areas include: Interaction Design, Interface Design, IA & Usability
Special interests in social media and mobile UX design


Contact Information

Cell: 425-971-8871
Email: brett@19SIXTY5.com
Blog: brettpolonsky.com
LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/brettpolonsky
Twitter: twitter.com/19SIXTY5
Facebook: facebook.com/19SIXTY5


Books

book

Client: Microsoft Press

Project: The Official Microsoft FrontPage 2000 Book

Yeah, it's wordy title, I know.

How did a guy like me get to write four books anyway?

In 1996 I was lucky enough to be in the right place at the right time. I was doing some contract work at Microsoft, in the pre-MSN days. We were working on a proprietary online environment that would allow for the dynamic display of various types of media. It was similar to what AOL was doing at the time. You could've, for example, have had a magazine automatically generate content and page through it using the tools and interfaces we were creating.

Well, after about two years of development (just over one for me), Microsoft discovered the internet. Everything changed.

Two things happened around that time: 1. They quickly dropped the project (code named Blackbird if anyone is curious), and 2. Microsoft bought Vermeer, the company that created FrontPage.

I actually saw a copy of the original FrontPage sitting on someone's office desk once, but when I was asked if I'd ever used it, I quickly answered yes. A friend of mine and I were already planning on proposing a book on the Blackbird software, and when someone suggested they needed a FrontPage book, we immediately became experts. We switched gears, and already knowing a few people at MSPress, we spent one night with the program and wrote out an entire outline and proposal for a book on FrontPage. That original outline stayed pretty much the same for the first two books. Remember though, at that time we didn't know anything about the program.

That first book, called Introducing Microsoft FrontPage, was over 400 pages and had a full-color insert. I not only co-wrote the book, I also did the entire layout, created the interior style guide, and designed the insert. All of this, from initial proposal through final manuscript, to print-ready PageMaker files was completed in just over 13 weeks. Oh, and did I mention that I'd never written anything at that time, and didn't even really know how to type? We had a blast.

It was the first book ever written on FrontPage, and if I remember correctly, that first book sold over 100,000 copies. In 1996, this was the first of a kind...a total WYSIWYG HTML editor...and a little piece of internet history. Now, you can get it on Amazon for about $0.06 or so.

The Forward was written by Randy Forgaard the co-founder of Vermeer, and the creator of FrontPage.

The book was translated into many different languages. A couple of the differet covers
are shown below.

book russian

spanish\

 

 

"Brett's real-world experience and down to earth approach to all of the projects assigned at school were an invaluable asset. It was refreshing to have my questions about the industry answered with such candor. What I most appreciated about Brett, was that he never let me perform below my abilities (even if i tried). In the end, I ended up much better prepared for the working world than I would have been otherwise."
 
"Brett's insight and expertise in web design was one of my main motivations for becoming a designer. Art school is expensive, and alot of the classes are ridiculous, but Brett's classes made the whole experience worthwhile because they gave you real experience and taught you that design is all about solving problems. Almost all of my work has its roots in Brett's teachings and they are essentially what made me a professional designer."

 

"I was a student of Brett Polonsky's at Cascadia Community College in his Basics of Web Authoring course during the fall quarter 2010. I would recommend his course to anyone thinking about learning the fundamentals of HTML and CSS. Brett is very knowledgeable and experienced. I learned a lot in his class and he really helped me get a firm grasp on the basic coding behind web pages."