I remember the first day I was introduced to the WWW. I was working at UCLA in 1994 and attended a presentation about a new thing called Mosaic. Mosaic, of course, later went on to become Netscape. I started playing around with HTML soon after that.
I had one of the first pages on the University of Minnesota Department of English servers when I was taking undergraduate courses in 1995. Unfortunately I can't find my copies of that work as I'm sure it would provide an amusing glimpse into "Web .5!"
I did pages for the UofMN extension and distance learning center--mostly postings about up-coming events and functions. The University wasn't ready for full-time web positions at that time so I didn't actually do any paid development work until 1999.
I did web production, markup, and design work for a company called WebsitePros. I was working on web tool api customization (designing content and code for an online web publishing tool) when the company closed its' San Francisco offices.
My next job was with Wineshopper.com and with wine.com (not the same wine.com as it exists today, but with the company as it was in 2000). I was responsible for bi-weekly sitebuilds, content development, graphic production, and, I oversaw the web development intranet.
My web development work has primarily been confined to corporate clients then and now. I took several years off--after the dot.com crash--to finish my undergrad work in English. Currently I do development work for Intel as a web coordinator. I work primarily on the corporate website. The examples of my work below, are either personal sites, design work for my group at Intel, or concept sites (I redesign their existing site as an exercise in coding and design) for other people.