My Portfolios

Hong Leatheng

លាត ហេង ចន្ទ ឬទ្ឋិ


Coder | Programmer | Data | Automation


I am a cinephile from Kampuchea, who after immigrating to the U.S., had become a tech professional in different fields.

I have worked in filmmaking, automation, mechatronics, data analyst, cyber-security.

Most of my professional IT career is at the back-end, dealing with servers, patch management, ..etc while most of personal projects are related to the front-end.

I can't claim to be an expert on everything in My Skill Trees but I do not find any of them to be impossible to master, during my experiences with them.

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(LHCR) Leat Heng Chan Rith is how I used to write my formal name in my birth country. Family name (Leat Heng) came first. Hong is what friends and families called me. You can call me Hong.


About

Having learn many technologies outside my works and inside it. It is hard to keep track of them, so I building a website to host some of what I done so far. The central point is these Skill Trees. and this page. .These trees listed the coding languages and skillsets that I've used before, and haven't forget that I used them.

Why so many external links?

Github is the website where I stored most of my coding projects. This website is made to display the results of the codes, which Github can't display as well. (due to it being mostly html files), though its ability for Markdown file made it better for longer readings in my experience.

Most websites has more features?

It would have been much, more faster and visually appealing if I bought a domain from "Wordpress" or "Squarespace", or a template from a full-time web designer, as they have those features built-in.

I built this mostly from scratch (with help from Open Source projects, of course). Easier and less complicated ways to make a website existed. But this is an opportunity to learn web design frameworks and tools such CSS, and Bootstraps, and it is FREE. I intended to built the features piece by piece in my spare time.

Is there a need for multi-page?

Not sure how fast all images in one page will load. I do know of the existence of Javascript Frameworks to load them faster. But I'm not planning on learning it today, at least until my current project(s) is done.

More interactive is better?

This is not a website if I want to apply to a UI/UX position. I personally prefer simple sites with text, image and limited Interactivity.

Too Much Text?

This website is designed to be simple as I can. All these texts might soon be tooltips, off-canvas, or collapsible cards. But right now, I really want to go back to Data-related projects.

Missing Links? Terrible spellings and grammars?

Issues will be fixed with a fresh pairs of eyes.

What the deal with the Amateur Photography link?

I did not post anything on that website for nine years, I want to start doing it again.