Posts Tagged ‘indonesia web developer’

Why in-house projects?

Wednesday, September 29th, 2010

A lot of companies specialized in websites creation in Indonesia usually tend to restrict their business into creating websites for others. By others, we mean other companies that need to exist on the web.

@ Idebaik, we think slightly differently. If the core of our business is obiously making websites for others, we always try to keep a space for internal projects. Internal projects can bring a lot of benefits to us :

  • They belong to us, which means any potential revenues generated by these projects will directly contribute to the company’s good health.
  • They are a good way to experiment new things in terms of website design and programming. Some of them can be considered as laboratories or experimental playground – the place we’re testing things so that next time we implement the technology, it would already be perfect.
  • They show our clients than if we do great websites for them, we are also able to give a global approach to things we do by being able to launch our own concepts. More than “people who do websites”, we are also creative ones.
  • These projects usually generate pretty good traffic and can only give better visibility to Idebaik.

Right now, we have a few in-house projects :

  • indonesiaclubbing.com, which after nearly 4 years of life has become the 1st website dedicated to nightlife and clubbing in Indonesia, with more than 11000 registered members (september 2010).
  • indonewsletter.com, which is a killer online promotion and marketing tool, to boost your sales and increase people’s awareness on your campaign by maintaining regular communication through eNewsletter. You can send up to 150,000 emails to your database in ONE SINGLE CLICK.
  • A branded online shopping – soon to be launched.

More coming soon!

Holiday is nearing its end – we’ll be back to the office soon!

Monday, September 13th, 2010

On behalf of everyone at idebaik web & graphics, we would like to say Happy Eid Mubarak 1431 H for all of you who celebrate it.

The office has its first long, long holiday after quite a period! August was busy of course, but the half-running September seems to be even busier, what with new projects coming in…So idebaik people have been enjoying a long, well-deserved Eid holiday between the 9th and the 15th of September 2010.

idebaik office is still open during the holiday though, so don’t worry – all you have to do is to send a mail and we will respond as soon as possible.

By the way, it’s already the 4th quarter of 2010 – time flies too fast!

Stay tuned for our upcoming projects…

The HARVEST V2 is going to be launched soon!

Sunday, September 5th, 2010

The HARVEST Online Patisserie & Chocolaterie

The HARVEST, Premier Patisserie and Chocolaterie in Jakarta, with several outlets spread all over Jakarta, one in Surabaya and one in Bandung (with further expansion to other cities in the agenda), already had an old website since a few years back.

Upon meeting us, they realized that they needed something better to embrace the growing customer database, and to welcome the boom of Web 2.0.

Thus we started the development of the site about a month ago, and last week, the site went up! Well, it’s still in the soft-launching stage, but on the first day the traffic already increased by 200%, the online sales’ amount increased by 400%, and they have over 300 new members just in 3 days.

Considering that it is only the first week of the soft-opening – the Grand Launching will be after Lebaran/Eid Holiday – we are happy and optimistic that The HARVEST will become Jakarta’s leading patisserie on the internet – they’re already one of the best offline, and the new online shop will only make their services better.

Also, it goes up! When you type “cakes” on Google.co.id, The HARVEST is on 3rd position – on the first results page! First two ones are Wikipedia and Cakes.com – not their competitors anyway!

We are happy for The HARVEST and looking forward to a long-term cooperation with them in the future.

jQuery – What for ?

Sunday, August 8th, 2010

Created in 2006, jQuery is a Javascript library that allow you to add a whole bunch of effects and animations to your website, giving it a livelier aspect without using Flash.

At Idebaik, when we were about to launch our own corporate website, almost a year already now, we sought to implement jQuery – but naturally.

And in the months that follow, jQuery gradually becomes something we always advise, when our clients ask for “a dynamic website with moving things”, still sans-Flash. Animated menu bars, fading effects, auto-complete search boxes – we can proudly say that we are, undoubtedly, one of the rare web companies in Indonesia who master this framework at its best.

Among the numerous functions used under jQuery library, we cite an example, the famous animate(), which, as you must’ve already guessed by its name, is a magic function able to animate just any element of a web page, giving it instant, arranged modifications of style (height, width and even background change, when combined with the jQuery UI plugin).

jQuery has become an indomitable element for the actual, up-to-date sites (The fact states that jQuery is currently used on 31% of the planet’s 10,000 most visited websites, including everyone’s favorite pastime-time-wasting social networking titan – the Facebook).

Although, the thing is you need to make use of jQuery wisely, not idly (and, in most cases, ignorantly) doing the erroneous practice of cut-copy-paste from a source you get through internet, without comprehending the library in order to be fully able to exploit the system.

At Idebaik, we create our own jQuery effects, giving you a guarantee that the site you trust us to do will not have such a-dime-a-dozen effects – it will have better, rarer effects, personalized to match your needs.

Obviously, to do that, one needs an excellent level of Javascript skills to completely master all the jQuery subtleties.

The advantage of using jQuery is also based, finally, on the fact that the increasing popularity of this technology gives it a constant evolution, and unlike other Javascript frameworks, we can be sure that the development of jQuery is not going to stop anywhere soon.

By reading this article, we would like to welcome you to the wonderful world of jQuery.

Nevertheless, the one and only little glitch of jQuery is that it is uncompatible with certain browsers from the past, for example Internet Explorer (IE) 5.5 (which hails from the Middle Age of Computers, about 10 years ago). Some people also say that jQuery is “heavy”, but to this I respond that jQuery, just like any other programming language or framework, must be learnt and mastered and a true web company will not rely on “copy-paste web developers” (Specimens of these species abound in Indonesia) – yes, jQuery will indeed be “heavy” if we don’t try to understand how it works, if we don’t care to find out how it works, if we don’t know how to create our own functions, if we don’t know how to optimize it for our own website.

But at Idebaik, we do understand. At our company, you’re in good hands.

We’ll be back in the upcoming weeks on the jQuery subject, upon the launching of several projects, currently in the final phase, all of them most certainly using  jQuery in all its splendor and glory. Stay tuned!

We love both Mac and PC

Friday, August 6th, 2010

In the eternal battle between Mac and PC ensued by creative houses all over the world, we pick no-one – we side with both.

What? How is that? You’re either a Mac person or a PC person.

Personally, it’s true. But professionally, well, it’s simple. We use both. We love both. We have a team that combines both technologies. We think that PC and Mac each has its own special features, and you simply need them all.

But we stay conventional, though: our designers both work on Mac (a Macbook Pro and a beautiful new 21.5 inch desktop iMac – the 27 inch coming soon, hopefully!) and they love using it, for the pixel-wise precision and the quality of the image; and our developers as well as the rest of the team members use Windows on various PC types and brands due to the practicality.

And the results? Combined results are the best – we test our sites in both platforms, using various popular browsers.

More electronic troop members coming soon…

Idebaik is growing!

Saturday, July 31st, 2010

July was a really good month for Idebaik, in all aspects. But like any company, at some point, we must be realistic and we have to admit that we need more people to face the never-ending growth of our business.

That’s why we decided to look for new people to join our team. And if you read our site carefully – I know you did ! -, you will know that @ Idebaik, an employee is more than just an employee. S/He is a part of Idebaik family !

So, starting from next week, three new employees will be joining our company. 2 Account Executives (Rizky & Yonash) and one intern web developer, Brieuc (I challenge you to speel his name perfectly), from France. All aged of 22 years old, they will help us answering the growing demand from our clients.

We will introduce you to them more in details soon !

Late-Night at the Office

Tuesday, July 27th, 2010

Yeah well, life is challenging. Work is, too! We’ve been getting SO MANY projects lately that we gotta stay later at work.

It’s been 3 days in a row that the whole office stays later at work, to meet the deadlines.  We worked on Sunday (yes we do) and Monday until 11 PM and today, Tuesday, it’s ten minutes before 11 PM and nobody shows the sign they’re ready to go.

You know, I so would like to complain, but I’m not and I won’t. Other people strive to get even the lousiest of projects and we are submerged with quality projects – not only fun in the financial matter but also fun to work on.

But I think we will invest more in eye cream domain – hello puffy eyes, hello eye-bags, hello dark circles! (And helllloooo, nice projects, potential clients!)

Below are some shots of this special night.

Maurice is checking Tepo’s latest jobs…

… and is obviously not satisfied!

For Uri, indonesiaclubbing deserves not less than 2 computers!

Surya loves his job when girls are involved in his layouts

Riza working on Berlian Entertainment website

Reyhan “The Legend” is a geek. His jokes always start with <?php

Exhausting day for Maurice. He deserves some sleep, definitely!

Web Design Business in Indonesia

Thursday, June 17th, 2010

Actually, web “design” is a term we don’t like.

We prefer saying web “creation” or web “development” – why? Because design is only one part of the process.

When a client commissions us to do a website, we start the project by doing some researches. See how their counterparts or competitors do it, what their target wants, what we think could be good to put into the structure, submit the core ideas and sit together to define the design direction.

And then, comes the designing phase. This is the time all the elements are put together in the big picture, where all the color codes and layouts are decided.

And the biggest part is yet to come…the basic HTML programming and the hard coding, including layout implementation before finally filling the contents and submitting website for beta test to client, just prior to the launch.

So, that’s why we say the term web is often mistakenly hooked up with the word “design” for a process that is actually called web creation.

The Facebook “Like” Button is Fashion

Monday, May 10th, 2010

Facebook LIKE Button Widget

The shape of internet world in Indonesia has drastically changed ever since Facebook was introduced. The social networking phenomenon went boom overnight and suddenly everyone, regardless of their social background, gender, status or education, thinks of Facebook as something important to keep up with their lives and the lives of their friends, family and acquaintances – anyone linked to them.

Many people use Facebook for a lot of other purposes: from dating to finding job to pitching projects – just about everything, a lot priorities and interests have been lured toward Facebook.

Just a few weeks ago at the end of April 2010, Facebook introduced a new widget of theirs, thus expanding the reign of Facebook to even bigger audience: the Facebook “Like” Button anyone can integrate to their web pages: marking anything and just any page with Facebook brand.

Several clients have requested us to install this widget to their website – a really quick and easy thing to do.

So now you can request that to us, too – let everything be parsed and liked by Facebook users, which, despite being too heterogeneous, can still be something really useful to help market and spread your website.

Creativity and the Sense of Art vs Neat Programming Techniques

Friday, April 30th, 2010

Unlike many other web companies, we don’t combine the functions of web designer and web developer altogether in one.

Others may see this as a way to save cost – if you can have both functions in one person, why hire two?

We say, each function its own incumbent.

Combining design and programming is already a hard task, let alone doing it on your own. We believe that when you ask someone to specialize just in one field, the person will put more energy and focus more on that task rather than when the concentration is divided into two.

A person that can do both web design and web development at the same time is very rare – most people do the one better than the other.  We prefer to put one person for the design, and the other for the programming, so that they complement each other.

Our designers are graduated from good art schools and they majored in visual communication, mostly, and they tend to be bent more on art, they don’t speak PHP, they don’t know how about things like if, $, what they know is how to make a website look as best as it can be. Their art senses are more developed than their technical senses.

Our developers are half IT-school graduates and half self-taught – practice makes them perfect.  They know well how to sort out codes but they can’t make artistic layouts – their technical senses are fully awake but not their art senses.

So they are complementary to each other – they complete the work process.

And that’s how our projects are handled: specific person works as a part of the whole team to ensure the results to be optimal.