My name is Brian Gabot. I am a business management/operations major currently seeking for various positions in the software industry.
I am a man who wears many hats. My key skills are project management, development and design software.
My hobbies and interests outside of work include illustrating, gaming and anime.
Internal Hub page for Facebook's Global Marketing Teams
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Website developed for the sjnoc, a non-profit organization for japanese americans. Built in node.js and express
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Freelance project built in jQuery
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A Ruby on Rails application to find collaboration partners for writers and artists
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Personality test application for rpg gamers
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A React.js application used to find japanese concerts in the bay area
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A ruby on rails app used as a social networking portal for gamers.
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Hackathon project that won 2nd price at API World 2016
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Collab-a-comic is a website application that helps comic book writers and artists find a collaboration partner. When creating a comic, you'll need two key skills: being a good writer and artist. However, it is difficult to be proficient in these two skills: you can be a good artist but lack writing skills or vice-versa you can be a great writer but not a great artist. This is where I got the idea for the site: to help artists find writers and to help writers find artists to create their comic.
The website was created through ruby on rails for the front-end and PostgreSQL for the backend. Although I used this stack on LFG, the group project that I worked on, I chose Rails/PostgreSQL to show that I can create a ruby on rails project on my own.
Persona Gamer is a personality test application catered towards RPG gamers. This was the first full-stack web application that I ever created. For the front-end, I used HTML, CSS, Javascript and jQuery. For the back-end, I used MongoDB.
When I first started building the application, I integrated traitify's API. However, I found that their were certain restrictions of the API. In the end, I removed the API from the site and replaced it with personality tests rewritten in jQuery and vanilla javascript.
Project Sakura is a yelp-like application to help users find japanese music events in their area. The app is built in React.js and Redux combined with two external API's: Google Maps and SoundCloud. As of right now, the app only has a front-end but I will integrate a backend to it in the future. I was the sole developer and designer for this project. I also created the svg illustrations via Adobe Illustrator.
I created this application because as a japanese music fan, I found it difficult to find a reliable japanese music event application on the web. Although there are a few sites that have japanese music event listings such as Facebook and small blogs, there is no reliable application out there that maintains this data. This is why I developed Project Sakura, an application that is frequently up-to-date with the latest japanese music events, all in one application. From a design perspective, I wanted to create something visually appealing. Because I love creating vector graphics and Adobe Illustrator, I decided to make the majority of the site in SVG graphics.
SJNOC is a non-profit organization that helps spread awareness of the Japanese American civil rights. Currently I am working on integrating a payment system using Stripe API, express.js and node.js.
Seanronimo.com is a website project that I've developed for a client, who is currently working as an interaction designer at Google. I implemented Javascript and jQuery to create some of the dynamic implementations of the site.
LFG is a social networking portal targeted towards gamers. Members will be able to form meet up groups for a specific game. I collaborated with three other group members to create a website built from Ruby on Rails. On the back-end, I worked on routings, authorizations, validations and seeded data while on the front-end, I worked on CSS stylings and some design work.
Squaddie is a web application to help companies create software engineering teams through personaility tests. Using traitify's api and a complex algorithm, employers are able to assign specific employees into certain groups.
This application was built during the API World 2016 Hackathon. I collaborated with 4 other people to build this app. My responsibilities included: explaining the functionality of the API (since I had prior knowledge of it on a previous app), wireframing, building the website interface and launching the site on a web server. The application won the 2nd place sponsor winner award from Traitify.
At Facebook, I was the front-end developer for the GMS Hub. I developed, designed and managed more than one hundred microsites used for sales enablement purposes.