![[The Fibonacci Series]](../media/topLogo1.gif)
The Making of "The Fibonacci Series"
ThinkQuest Team 27890 started as an idea
in January posed by Jeffrey Frazier to me, Matt Anderson. I had never heard of ThinkQuest
at that time but the prospects of designing an educational web page were promising. Jeffrey
had in mind a third teammate who would be graduating in the spring but because of a combination
of issues, all three of us decided to leave him off of the team. I asked my friend in Utah, Kris
Popendorf, if he was interested in joining us. He was, and so formed the team as it was to be.
We filled out the application forms online and found a coach (my dad). By then it was April, and
we still didn't know what the page was going to be about. When all three of us discussed
the page, it was in ICQ chat whenever we chanced upon being online at the same time. Other than
the Fibonacci Series, we had seriousliy considered doing a page on logarithms. Spring was coming up
and all the big projects were due, studying for finals was necessary, and none of us had time to work
on the page.
We didn't actually start on the page until after
our summer vacation started. Already there was an obstacle: though Jeffrey and I got out of school
at the same time (we attend the same school), Kris's school in Utah didn't get out until weeks after
that. While we were trying to get work done, Kris was busy with school. With three people, it seemed
more logical to delegate tasks to each individual than to leave no structure at all. I became Designer,
Jeffrey became our Writer, and Kris became our Programmer. It turned out that this was the best thing
because Kris is incredible with computers (see his Biography page),
I'm very good with graphics and layout, and Jeffrey is an excellent writer. Of course, writing is a lot of
work, so I helped lighten Jeffrey's load by doing some research and writing a few of the pages.
All three of us had unique schedules. I
went on a 2 and 1/2 week-long vacation to Minnesota to visit family in the first part of July. I
was able to have some limited contact with Jeffrey and Kris but no work was done on the page.
Jeffrey played in the orchestra for the Oklahoma Summer Arts Institute
over a two week period during which he had to stay in a dorm at the University of Oklahoma (even though
he lives here in Norman, where the university is, he was required as a rule to stay in a dorm). Suffice
it to say, he was very busy during those two weeks. Kris was away on a trip to the eastern part of the
United States visiting colleges for a couple of weeks.
Over all, we had a total of about 3 months time
to complete the site by the August 16th deadline. This was a tremendous obstacle for us as some teams
work on their pages through the school year and summer. We made the most of it, and I believe
that's reflected in our page.
Here is a list of some of the software
that was used in developing The Fibonacci Series:
No WYSIWYG (What You See Is What You Get) HTML software
was used in the creation of this page (some examples are Microsoft Frontpage and Adobe PageMill). All HTML
"coding" was done by "hand" (of course, HTML is not actual software code, nor is it written with a hand, but
"coding by hand" seems to be the popular way of saying it nowadays). All of our JavaScript is original,
written by one of us (most likely Kris).