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I must admit that I use Microsoft FrontPage quite a bit. It's not that I am particularly
fond of the product, it's just that FrontPage has a very simple, easy-to-use WYSIWYG
(What You See Is What You Get) editor. This is especially true of it's support
for tables and lists. In fact, I'd venture to say that FrontPage has by far the
best WYSIWYG editor on the market.
I began using FrontPage many years ago, when it was a free add-on to Internet
Explorer called FrontPage Express (if there was a paid version available at
the time I didn't know about it). One day I remember receiving a copy of Microsoft
Office with a demonstration disk for FrontPage 97. It sounded interesting so
I tried it out.
The product was very nice, and even that early in the HTML editor game it was
in many ways superior to what we have on the market today. However, on the downside,
FrontPage 97 crashed a little more often that I would have liked (but hey, it's
a Microsoft product, so I was used to this and didn't really think much of it
at all) and it had this annoying habit of thinking it knew better that I did.
The entire Office suite has this problem: the products try very hard to prevent
you from doing something that is not "correct". In FrontPage, for
example, there are times when it will not allow you to resize a table for no
apparent reason. The program simply seems to think it's a dumb idea and will
not let you do it.
FrontPage 98 was a vast improvement over the previous version, and I quickly
upgraded. By now, however, I was learning a bit more and had discarded many
of the features that the product offered. First to go was templates - these
are a great idea but the implementation, quite frankly, sucks. Not only is the
style of any FrontPage site created from templates so recognizable that it screams
"amateur" to everyone, they simply do not buy you very much in the
way of ease of web site creation. Templates seem designed to limit a person
into a specific, Microsoft approved style of web site design, and that design
is, well, stupid.
Next to get thrown out was the automatic upload feature. You see, FrontPage
has a wonderful feature (well, it would be wonderful except ...) which will
upload all of your changes (and only your changes) to your web site. Unfortunately,
the implementation is completely lame. FrontPage will not transfer CGI and perl
routines in ASCII, and thus the upload feature cannot be used on a web site
which uses CGI. To top that off, the upload feature is so awesomely slow that
it's possible to believe the design specification required the slowness to be
built into the product. It's so slow that it's hard to believe this could have
happened by accident.
Hover buttons are a great looking feature, but as with many other FrontPage
extras the implementation is lame. The form handling of FrontPage is so poorly
implemented that I found it completely unusable and installed my own CGI routines
(thus leading to the issue described in the previous paragraph). The dynamic
HTML features are quite simply awesome, but again the implementation is lame.
So one by one the really powerful features of FrontPage have proved themselves
to be too limited, slow or poorly implemented to be of use.
However, the WYSIWYG editor is wonderful, so when FrontPage 2000 was released
I was fairly excited. And FrontPage 2000 was a vast improvement over the earlier
versions of the product. In fact, I believe the entire Office 2000 suite was
as close to perfect as it could get (besides an occasional bug). In my opinion,
Microsoft should have stopped development on the entire suite at that time,
as there really is nothing useful to add. I know in my own workplace my users
probably use about 5% of the suite's capabilities, and the remaining features
are more than enough to satisfy the occasional power user.
I was looking forward to the upgrade to Office XP. I don't know why, since
I basically am not using the product all that much anymore. I simply use FrontPage
2000 as a WYSIWYG front end, then go in an edit the HTML code by hand where
necessary. In fact, lately I've been finding myself switching back to good old
FrontPage Express more and more often.
Nonetheless, I looked forward to the new product (I mean FrontPage 2000 was
a very good upgrade after all) and eagerly ran to my desk with the new copy
the day it arrived. The upgrade went in easily and quickly ...
And within 2 hours the product had been removed from my system. I believe this
is the quickest uninstall on a major product that I have ever done.
Now keep in mind that I did not perform a feature-to-feature comparison between
the two products. I was going to do so, but FrontPage XP did not even pass the
initial first look. The product was that horrible.
It wouldn't even render my pages properly. My site is handled perfectly well
by every browser that I've checked it in and by every single other editor I've
tested. There is absolutely nothing unusual about it in any way. Yet FrontPage
XP could not show the pagers properly.
The product had even more "FrontPage-isms" than before, and it was
slow. Very, very slow.
So I will be brief and finish up this article quickly. I wouldn't recommend
anything about FrontPage XP, and for that matter, the complete Office XP suite
to anyone. I have no idea why anyone would accept this product for free, much
less pay for it.
To be very crass about it, I kind of view these products (FrontPage XP and
Office XP) as the equivalent of expensive working girls. Sure, you will have
fun, but it will cost you a fortune, you will catch a virus or two, you may
get worms, and you'd be much better off staying at home talking to your wife
or girlfriend.
About the Author:
Richard Lowe Jr. is the webmaster of Internet Tips And Secrets at http://www.internet-tips.net
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