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About Microsoft FrontPage
We have built this site using Microsoft FrontPage 2003.
Microsoft FrontPage is a WYSIWYG HTML
editor and web site administration tool from Microsoft for the Windows
operating system. It is part of Microsoft Office and included in some
versions of the popular bundle.
FrontPage was initially created by the Cambridge, Massachusetts company
Vermeer Technologies Incorporated, evidence of which can be easily
spotted in filenames and directories prefixed _vti_ in web sites created
using FrontPage. Vermeer was acquired by Microsoft in 1996 specifically
so that Microsoft could add FrontPage to its product line-up.
FrontPage used to require proprietary plug-ins known as the FrontPage
Server Extensions to be installed in the target web server for it to
work. However newer versions of FrontPage also support the standard
WebDAV protocol from W3C.
As a WYSIWYG editor, FrontPage is designed to hide the details of pages'
HTML code from the user, making it possible for non-experts to easily
create Web pages and sites. Some web developers criticize this approach
as producing HTML pages that are much larger than they should be and
cause Web browsers to perform poorly. In addition, some people criticize
FrontPage specifically for producing code that often does not comply
with W3C standards and sometimes does not display correctly in
non-Microsoft web browsers. However recent versions are much better in
that respect and produce lean and Standards-complient code.
A version for Mac OS was released around 1998; however, it had fewer
features than the Windows product and Microsoft never updated it.
FrontPage's primary competitor is Macromedia Dreamweaver, another Web
design product.
One of the more unique features of FrontPage is that it has built in
support for automated and easy to use web templates. The main
distinction between these templates and other universal html templates
is that FrontPage templates include an automatic navigation system that
creates animated buttons for pages that have been added by the user, and
creates an advanced multi-level navigation system on the fly using the
buttons and the structure of the web site. FrontPage templates also
commonly include FrontPage themes in place of CSS styles.
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