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bmcgonag

macrumors 65816
Original poster
Mar 20, 2007
1,077
0
Texas
Besides iWeb, is there a good, fairly user friendly, easy to get a grip on, WYSIWYG web page maker out there that any of you would suggest?

I like iWeb, but it is occasionally inflexible, and it really makes things difficult.

Thanks for any input,

Brian
 
You could try Dreamweaver, now that CS3 has been announced. Slightly more complex but a lot more flexibility.

Universal binaries are great, too.
 
You could try Dreamweaver, now that CS3 has been announced. Slightly more complex but a lot more flexibility.

Universal binaries are great, too.
yeah, if you have a $1000 to spend :rolleyes:

NVU is free but I never tried it, Rapidweaver seems very solid for what you pay, and iWeb is ... well, it looks good, but not useful for large websites.
 
yeah, if you have a $1000 to spend :rolleyes:

NVU is free but I never tried it, Rapidweaver seems very solid for what you pay, and iWeb is ... well, it looks good, but not useful for large websites.

Thanks all,

I'm definitely not a pro website developer, so Dreamweaver is out of my league bioth price-wise, and user-wise.

Tried NVU, which is ok, but a little difficult at times, and not worth my headache anyway.

i will give rapidweaver a try.

Thanks again,

Brian
 
No Sandvox fans?

I'll be the first to tell you that if you want to do websites "correctly," do them by hand, but Sandvox always seemed to me like it was more powerful than RapidWeaver. Of course, the extra power does come at a slight cost, but that's okay, you get what you pay for.
 
Thank you soooo much for the Rapidweaver link. I never even knew that app. existed. iWeb is a great little app. but Rapidweaver seems to offer a bit more. Thank you!!!!
 
No Sandvox fans?

I'll be the first to tell you that if you want to do websites "correctly," do them by hand, but Sandvox always seemed to me like it was more powerful than RapidWeaver. Of course, the extra power does come at a slight cost, but that's okay, you get what you pay for.

I like the look of it, so I'll see what I can do with it.

Thanks,
 
No Sandvox fans?

I'll be the first to tell you that if you want to do websites "correctly," do them by hand, but Sandvox always seemed to me like it was more powerful than RapidWeaver. Of course, the extra power does come at a slight cost, but that's okay, you get what you pay for.
I never actually heard of it but it looks very interesting. I'll also check it out, thanks :)
 
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