About Sun-tech.org

Sun-tech.org is the website for SUN Area Technical Institute of New Berlin, Pennsylvania. The site was originally developed in the mid-nineties by a privately owned web design firm and was brought in-house in 2009 in order to expedite updates and save thousands annually in hosting and maintenance fees. Network Technician Brian Reich currently develops and maintains the site.

Technologies

Throughout the transition from outsourced development to in-house management of our site, certain sections of sun-tech.org remain static HTML files. The site continues to be successfully transitioned to the dynamic technologies discussed below.

The LAMP Platform

SUN Tech's website runs on what is generally known as the LAMP stack, which stands for Linux, Apache, MySQL, and PHP. We chose these technologies for their time-tested reliability, low cost of adoption, and the developer's previous experience with the platform.

Zend Framework

Sun-tech.org is powered by the Zend Framework.

The Zend Framework is an open source collection of object-oriented PHP code supported both by the open source community and leading industry vendors including Google, Amazon, and Flickr. The Zend Framework enables SUN Area Technical Institute to rapidly develop not only simple HTML pages but also interactive, database-backed web applications like our Grade Conversion Utility.

Other Technologies

Images and Icons

The vast majority of artwork found on this website was created in Adobe Creative Suite. Custom artwork is designed both by the in-house web developer and by the Advertising Art & Design class where indicated.

Favicon

The “faveicon” for sun-tech.org (SUN Area Technical Institute Fave Icon) was designed by 2009-2010 Advertising Art and Design student Selah Reitenbach of Shikellamy School District.

Other Image Sources

Web Standards

With each update to our website, SUN Area Technical Institute has made adherence to web standards and accessibility requirements a priority.

XHTML 1.0 Strict

The XHTML 1.0 Strict standard was chosen as our mark-up language of choice for a variety of reasons: