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I wasn¡¯t the author of this thread, nor would I have started it! I have been in many discussions regarding this topic and since both of the Softwares in question continue to upgrade AND the two are now under one roof I think it is a VALID TOPIC. Were not just talking about which one is better.

Me being new here is really irrelevant. What is relevant is that Ryan decided to be a part of the discussion.

There is a rule of thumb regarding the forum culture. If you see a thread that you are not interested in, just ignore it. If you have some information that might be helpful to the author then apply some content. That¡¯s why I was anxious to see if Ryan¡¯s comments had any value.

I don¡¯t mind rehashing subjects like this. Especially with young designers who are anxious to learn and have a actual discussion on a forum.

When considering a web hosting, a few things is important. No.1 is the reliability. Some hosting companies are not reliable. The might deleted your store without notification someday. And you might lost your business. The second is the speed. If the server is slow, it will drive your customers mad and they will not buy.

This is were am i heading with the type layout design. The middle is going to be a frame and the type doc. page will load into the window. Any type that breaks the edge of bottom frame will be scrollable.

This would be an example of the layout for the programs page.

I also modified the banners somewhat. Since the page has been created at 800 x 600 pix the whole thing will be visable at once. There for, i figure the contact in bold at bottom sticks out quite well and works with the design.

The type is there for layout purposes only. There are many grammer errors exist which are irrelevent at this time.

Since more and more people are having their own sites. Not everybody would like to run a server. Actually it is not necessary to run a server for a business. Most online businesses have their store hosted in web hosting companies.

Which is better, you ask. They both have strong and weak points. I started out with Dream weaver and then eventually switched to Golive, mainly because all the adobe products (photo shop, image ready, golive, etc) talk to each other while designing. So it just makes things easier.

Really this has been answered many times. It really doesn't matter what you use as long as you know HTML and CSS. Web design is not print design knowing just software doesn't cut it.

The company I work for wants to update their site. From what I¡¯ve researched purchasing either of the above programs will help me get something up sooner than straight coding and with a better result than using Microdevil¡¯s  FrontPage. As far as a learning curve is concerned, which would you recommend? Please discuss interface and editing in your responses.

For most of your shopping, you don't need to pay the otherwise very expensive sales tax. You may need to pay the shipping though. But most of the time, the shipping cost less than the tax.

You don't have to make that choice next year cause Macromedia was bought by Adobe, and Go-Live is now...well dead seeing it will be getting the axe next release it is better to invest and learn dream weaver, you'll also save money on the future upgrades...and since go live will be dying, you'd need to jump to dream weaver at some point anyway.

Currently i use dream weaver, its an easy program to get to grips with imo, and there are lots of helpfull tutorials avaible for it more so than GoLive. Dream weaver offers a more or less better starting point to get your work together and on the web.

I have Go Live CS2 i haven't even bothered to install it when i was bought the Cs2 suite it was the only one i thought not worth the effort.

I was just watching The Good The Bad & The Ugly just yesterday. I love watching those Clint Eastwood spaghetti westerns.

Anyways, the site is has a little too much drawing the eye for me. I'd remove the 'a' symbol from the bottom of the page, and the green right-angle you have at the top-right. I also think the contact button shouldn't be isolated at the bottom of the page like that, but rather up on the main menu or even higher (after all, a charity will be seeking to gain alot of contact through the site - this is probably the most important part of the site, and should be considered as such in the design).

Before I give any other comments though ... is the main text of each page going to be crammed into the far-right section of tha page? Is there always goign to be such an overwhelming image to the left (the image with the green border around it), like on this page?

Another advantage is the products can be exposed to a large number of potential customers. Suppose you live in a town with 10,000 people. This is not very small town in the US. You have something to sell but within the 10,000 people, only 0.01% people may be interested in your product.

Overall I agree with Ulysses. But your navigation bar starts of lined up with that grey bar over the white box and then continues on to float into nothingness (It looked like it was supported by the grey bar and then, weee we're floating in space!).

You might also play around with your grid a bit more and get more things lining up (i.e. "donate" button gets hacked in two by the vertical line below it) things like that.

Also, not sure if the body type should be serif as everything else is san-serif. You probably also have to make the text at least 12 pts. (it might be I just can't tell cause its a reduced picture) for the old people (sigh. ruining all the fun with small text).

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The web is different from the internet. Internet is the physical network of the computers. The web is the site and pages where people can visit and view to gain information or perform activities.


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Last modified: Tuesday October 18, 2005.