Hi all,
I've got an old iLife with no iWeb.
Can someone tell me how having iWeb and an iMac acccount (which I have never had) compares to, say, using blogger or googlepages?
For example, back when I was hosting my www.eclipsenow.org website professionally and using Adobe GoLive, I had Navigation bars Components that could be added to as many pages as I wanted. Then if I added a new page to that Navbar, it just updated automatically through all the pages.
Does iWeb have that?
Lastly, I stopped using GoLive for a few reasons.... (we are a print design firm, and I am the "eternal apprentice" to my professionally trained wife who has no desire to get into web therefore I will not either!
) .... but one of the main ones was it became far, far to "clunky".
I posted here about trying different things in the CSS and someone had a heart attack over the messy code. Does iWeb mess up the code?
Anyway, I'm just asking because I know blogger and googlepages are pretty big, and I'd have to have a pretty good reason to switch across to paying for my smallish websites.
I've got an old iLife with no iWeb.
Can someone tell me how having iWeb and an iMac acccount (which I have never had) compares to, say, using blogger or googlepages?
For example, back when I was hosting my www.eclipsenow.org website professionally and using Adobe GoLive, I had Navigation bars Components that could be added to as many pages as I wanted. Then if I added a new page to that Navbar, it just updated automatically through all the pages.
Does iWeb have that?
Lastly, I stopped using GoLive for a few reasons.... (we are a print design firm, and I am the "eternal apprentice" to my professionally trained wife who has no desire to get into web therefore I will not either!
I posted here about trying different things in the CSS and someone had a heart attack over the messy code. Does iWeb mess up the code?
Anyway, I'm just asking because I know blogger and googlepages are pretty big, and I'd have to have a pretty good reason to switch across to paying for my smallish websites.