  | Kodak Intranet ProjectsIn November 1997, a division of Kodak was preparing to rollout Windows NT
4.0 to several thousand new users. In preparation for the rollout, I was
contracted to develop four new Intranet sites to support the effort. These websites
were developed in just over a month's time using a combination of Active Server
Pages 1.0, Visual Basic 5.0 and Microsoft Access. The four websites were: - Phone List
- This was a department's phone list that synchronized and consolidated
information from a variety of internal sources.
- Directory Permission
- This was by far the most complicated of the websites. The client
identified that a large number of Help Desks calls were due to users that
were unable to locate resources on the network or organizations that needed
to validate network permissions.
For this website, we developed an application that would scan all of the
user, group and directory permissions from several servers nightly. The
website then allowed users to enter a username or group name and retrieve a
easy to organize summary of all network resources that the user could
access. Likewise, a user could also traverse a graphical representation of
the network to identify who had permissions to access a resource. - Desktop Application Support
- The Desktop Application Support website allowed users to browse and search
a comprehensive list of applications that were supported by Kodak. For each
application, the user could view important information such as license
agreements, who to contact to request software, e-mail addresses of key
users (local users identified to be “experts” on the application)
and hyperlinks to knowledge bases, web sites, etc.
This application was unique in the fact that it gave the customer a great
deal of flexibility to modify and extend the structure of the web site from
an intuitive Microsoft Access interface. - Kodak News
- This website was a team project with a fellow co-worker. This website
provided a simple interface that allowed users throughout Kodak to publish
articles and news that would appear on a scrolling Java ticker on the
corporate web site. This application provided automation to help target
important messages to specific divisions and control the amount and timing
of articles.
| |