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See Mikiko’s Work

Content management and web production at Apple, Google, Cadence, Altera (Intel), Safeway, the Judicial Council of California, and more.

As an author, she has published several works on digital creativity, and her designs have been featured in numerous online platforms.

Web Production & Content Management

Apple Support Web

Apple: Support Web Production

Produced, edited, and tested web pages in Apple Legacy CMS as well as AEM at Apple Support Web Group.

Also localized web pages into specified languages.

Google Store

Google Store: Web Production

Produced, edited, and published Google Store web and interstitial pages in Google’s proprietary CMS, Gordon, with promotional components, collaborating with the store product marketing team at Google.

The Judicial Council of California website

The Judicial Council of California: Web Production

Assisted the Judicial Council of California with website platform migration, producing, publishing, and updating web pages for California County Superior Courts using Drupal.

VS technology website

VS Technology: Localized Web Development, Content & Web Production

Created the new architecture, wireframed the site structure, wrote and managed English content, and produced web pages in PHP client for the company’s English website working with the original Japanese developer on the product database configuration and integration. As a result of this project, the company overhauled its entire website on a new CMS per my recommendation.

Uniforce Sales & Engineering Info

Uniforce Sales & Engineering: New Website Development Project Management, Content & Web Production

Developed an entirely new WordPress site by:

  • Working with and managing an external WordPress developer,

  • Designing the site architecture and wireframing,

  • Developing and managing site content, including product databases,

  • Using WordPress to model and produce web pages 

This project increased the company’s visibility and business significantly.

The company’s active website is currently unavailable.

Sample Home Page for Sylvia Cuenca

Sample Site for Sylvia Cuenca

This is a sample site for a musician and educator, Sylvia Cuenca. Content was imported from her existing site and edited in WordPress.

Mikiko has also worked for Infinera and Box, Inc., providing web production services.

Web & Content Localization

Altera-Intel Japan website

Altera (Intel) Japan: Localization and Production

Assisted platform migration from SharePoint to AEM (ACQ), managed the localization process for the APAC team in Japanese, Simple Chinese, and Traditional Chinese. Also localized content and produced web pages in Japanese.

Cadence Japan website

Cadence Japan: Platform Migration and Localization Management

Assist Cadence Japan with the migration from SharePoint to AEM. To enable timely localization, worked with the engineering team in San Jose to provide Japan-specific AEM components. Also assisted the PR team in updating their event pages in AEM.

Google’s Customer Support Team Training Video

Managed the Japanese and Korean localization process for Google’s Customer Support Training team. Also produced localized e-learning courses, training videos, and media assets in Japanese. The video clip above is an excerpt from the training video. The scripts were translated into Japanese and added as the caption in Adobe Premiere.

Other Projects

Google cloud business slide samples

Google Cloud Business Partner Marketing: Creative Content Design and Production

Designed and created presentation slides for the Google Cloud Partner Business Executive Teams to present at conferences.  Also audited and managed the Cloud Business Unit’s resource files in preparation for accessible archiving.

Infographics: French Press Coffee

Infographics, Slides, and Other Media Assets

Design and produce various creative and media assets, including infographics, slides, video clips, etc.

Download the French Press Coffee infographics.

Digital Be-In Tokyo 95

Localized Event Production

Mikiko attended a few Digital Art Be-In events in the early 1990s and was impressed by the creative and artistic applications of technologies.

In early 1994, Mikiko envisioned bringing the Digital Be-In to Tokyo and initiated the event plan by contacting Michael Gosney at Verbum, the original producer, and IDG Japan (now a part of Nikkei BP), the producer of MacWorld Expo Japan.

IDG Japan and Gosney agreed to collaborate, co-produce, and hold the event at Makuhari Messe on the second night of MacWorld Expo Tokyo in 1995. The rest is history.

Timothy Leary at Digital Be-in

What Is Digital Be-In?

The Digital Be-In has been produced in San Francisco since 1989 by Michael Gosney working with various collaborators including Robert Gelman, Allen Cohen, Chet Helms, and many other people and groups. Perhaps best described as the original “socially conscious cyberculture event,“ the Digital Be-In began in spirit as a nod to the San Francisco counterculture and its influence on the technology revolution in the form of Verbum magazine’s industry party during the January Macworld Expo. Over the years it evolved into a public event in San Francisco, with special editions held in London and Tokyo.

(Excerpts from Be-in.com—no longer online)

Also read about the Human Be-ins here.

Digital Be-In Tokyo 95

Japan’s first large scale digital Be-In Event

In 1995, Verbum‘s president Michael Gosney and Mikiko Murdoch along with IDG Japan organized a Be-In in Tokyo 95, Japan. There they had a video tape message from Timothy Leary, a presentation on the links between the 1960s counterculture of the Bay Area and the personal computer revolution, a Digital Art Gallery, and the Digital Frontier included exhibits by avant garde multimedia publishers.

Media Article on Tokyo Be-in

The first Digital Be-In held outside of San Francisco was held outside of the Western Hemisphere: in the Land of the Rising Sun. Co-organized by Verbum’s Michael Gosney (original Digital Be-in organizer), IDG Expo (organizers of MacWorld Expo), and Mikiko Murdoch (co-producer of Digital Be-in Tokyo 95), the event was held at Makuhari Messe Conference center in Chiba where MacWorld Expo was also held, and had 150,000 attendees (50,000 or more of which do not own computers!).

The Be-In attracted about 2000 attendees. The event, sponsored by Apple Computer and others, began with a presentation by Michael Gosney of Verbum on the history of the Be-In and the connections between the 1960s Bay Area-based counterculture and the personal computer revolution. Gosney presented a videotaped keynote message from Timothy Leary, in which he complimented the Japanese people on their spiritual depth and modern leadership, and suggested that Japan is going to “Turn On, Intertune In, and Shine Out!”

Performances included live music. The Digital Art Gallery was organized by Tadao Shibata, editor of SuperDesigning magazine.

The Digital Frontier featured exhibits by avant garde multimedia publisher Digitalogue, HSC Software, Oracion and many others.

One of the most popular features of the event was an auction for the Kobe earthquake victims: vendors donated millions of yen worth of software. The publicity on the event was quite widespread, including national television news stories.

Tokyo Be-In Videos on Facebook

AKA Dig on Facebook
Tokyo Be-In Facebook video 2

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See Mikiko's Portfolio

Mikiko Is Available for Hire or Freelance.