• Static Websites
  • Dynamic Websites
  • Content Management
  • Custom Business Solutions
  • Social Integration & Development
  • Consulting

the web, built for you

that's what I do

Websites and web applications, built just the way you need - for your customers, employees and you

Website D&D Design & Development

Designing and Developing websites and web applications (what's the difference?) is my passion.

From informational only websites to full-fledged web applications, we're here to get you going.

Take a look at D&D Solutions and see the possibilities

Consulting What {?} You Do

What COULD you do?

What SHOULD you do?

How? When? These are questions you should be asking and I can help answer.

Take a look at the process and how it can help you.

Brand Use Your Brand

You have a company name. Do you have a logo? Do you use it?

Your brand is who you and your company are - make sure you use it: business cards, website, letterhead, envelopes, Facebook...

I can help get you all packaged up.

Social Integration Connect with the masses

You have a company name. Do you have a logo? Do you use it?

Your brand is who you and your company are - make sure you use it: business cards, website, letterhead, envelopes, Facebook...

More on Branding...

Case Studies

Case studies are good examples of what has been done to solve certain problems. The technologies used and implemented might provide some insight into solutions for your specific environment.

View Case Studies

What I use to build what you need

I tend to use the Microsoft stack (I'm a Microsoft Partner), this allows me to focus on a smaller set of technologies and become an expert in them. While listing everything we could use would take too much space, these are the main technologies used today.

  • HTML, HTML 5, CSS
  • ASP.NET, MVC, C#
  • SQL Server
  • javascript, jQuery, AJAX
  • web services consumption (xml, rest, odata, APIs, screen scraping) like Facebook & twitter

Html.Raw(Webchanix.Web.WebchanixHtmlHelper.Icon(this.Html, "I48 IFullView", "Go to...")) Go to

Html.Action("Footer", "Blog")