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| Bad Dog Cafe Hershey's Bad Dog Cafe is where Off Topic Discussion is welcomed -- but please follow our rules and stay away from subjects that turn political or have caused fights in the past. |
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#1 (permalink) |
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Tele-Afflicted
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The best freeware Web editors???
My wife has been using Netscape editor for years, but she is fed up with it.
What is the best WYSIWYG free or open source web editor you have found? She needs it to do her ebay stuff, but she has almost no technical ability. And since she is doing ebay stuff, it has to be generic web compliant, no Frontpage kind of programs that stick a bunch of proprietary code into it. I tired Maguma, but it might be too complex for her... Thanks in advance.
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Best guitar photos on the net! photoweborama.com! |
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#4 (permalink) |
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Tele-Afflicted
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For years I used HomeSite, a great lightweight editor for Windows. It's still available, but it got bought by Adobe/Macromedia and now costs more money ($99). It's probably a good bet for someone with little technical ability (and no desire to learn).
I've used the HTML Editor in SeaMonkey and it's OK. I had a project that needed proper handling of UTF8 text, including right-to-left handling of Hebrew characters. SeaMonkey came to my rescue. As for the text editors: I hate NotePad. I LOVE NoteTab Light, a free Windows text editor. I also have tried NotePad + and it's OK (has line numbering, which is nice). I do most of my work over SSH to UNIX servers, so I do 90% of my work in VIM (an arcane UNIX text editor). I don't want to bring the Vi vs. Emacs wars to TDPRI, but they're more violent than the Tele vs. Les Paul wars, any day of the week. But seriously, a good text editor is worth its weight in gold. Though for your wife, something like HomeSite is probably better. There's a free 30-day trial.
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Two Teles, One Strat, Two Acoustics (6 & 12 strings), Two Mandolins (4 & 8 strings), One Bass (5 strings) |
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#6 (permalink) |
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Tele-Meister
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Not too many good, free, WYSIWYG editors out there these days. Lots of good, free text-based editors, though. PSPad, Notepad+, and PFE being three that come to mind. Textpad is also excellent, but it costs a few dollars ($45 USD, I think).
For free WYSIWYG, I'd give KompoZer (formerly NVU) a shot. Even though it's not being actively developed, it is still good for basic Web page development: http://www.kompozer.net/ Let us know how it works for you...
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-- Drew |
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