Module Development
Littlestar Prints
Littlestar Prints is one of our favorite sites. It combines some powerful drag-and-drop photo editing in the browser with e-commerce. We got to use both of our favorite software packages--Drupal and the Dojo Toolkit.
With Littlestar Prints, customers can upload photos from their desktop, zoom, resize, crop, and do some color changes before embedding them into beautiful professionally-designed cards.
Organic Materials Research Institute (OMRI)
Another large scale project by Freelock Computing, the Organic Materials Research Institute tested our abilities to work with a variety of sources and the Drupal system. The project brought their old public facing website built on PHP to the Drupal CMS and is still synced nightly with their internal master database built on Access.
WestSide Baby
WestSide Baby, in partnership with the Puget Sound community, provides essential items to local children in need by collecting and distributing diapers, clothing, toys and equipment. They partner with established social service providers who assess the needs of their clients, place orders with us and then deliver them to the families they serve.
Olympic Peninsula Tourism Commission
The Olympic Peninsula Tourism Board came to us in early 2009 to assist them in developing a visually stunning and highly functional website in a Content Management System. The site needed to be flexible enough to be managed by the 12 partners of the OPTC represented by local Chamber of Commerces. This meant the system needed to not only be able of handling complex permissions, but also easy to use and train new members. That being said, we recommended the use Drupal because of it highly flexible theme capabilities and content management superiority over platforms such as Joomla.
An XML-based Report Browser
One of Freelock, LLC's ongoing customers needed a web front-end for a proprietary reporting tool. This reporting tool could be configured to generate reports that ended up in Microsoft Excel.
This was our first AJAX application, written long before the term was coined in 2003.















