Le 24/07/12 07:13, Yarrow a crit: > I just downloaded BG to make a website for a friend's small business. I > have made a site for them already in an ancient program (microsoft > publisher) because that's all i know how to use.
I feel, however, that > what I have made looks well, old and dated. Granted its better than what > they have currently but I wanted to try to get them something clean and > polished, a more modern and fancy kind of site. Since I know nothing of > coding, other than CSS is the new go to thing for fancy sites, I decided > I wanted to use a template. To my dismay, all of the fabulous templates > shown say you must go to a site and pay for them, and in the description > says you will then gain access to *2864 free templates. *If they are > free, why must i first pay 12.11USD (approx)to gain access to them? I > understand BG is currently free and a great option for those like me who > are incapable of coding, but I feel showing us then denying us access to > the templates till we cough up some dough is rather underhanded.

You pay for it because being we worked on a universal manifest for template sites, implemented it, spent time gathering these manifest and implemented a rather nice and super-simple UI above them. You can still get free templates from the Web, download them, unzip them, manually change the filename and directory architecture. We do it in one click w/o needed tech knowledge. Greg Chapman 24/7/2012, 1:52 น. Hi Daniel, On 24 Jul 12 08:35 Daniel Glazman said: > You pay for it because being we worked on a universal manifest for > template sites, implemented it, spent time gathering these manifest > and implemented a rather nice and super-simple UI above them.
Jul 17, 2011 - Blue Griffon BlueGriffon is a great WYSIWYG web content editor powered. You can download BlueGriffon for free in several languages. Items, from presentation templates for powerpoint & keynote with hundreds of un. Find related downloads to Bluegriffon Templates freeware and softwares, download Blue Griffon, PhotoShine Mini, OpenOffice, PowerPoint Viewer, LibreOffice.
> > You can still get free templates from the Web, download them, unzip > them, manually change the filename and directory architecture. We > do it in one click w/o needed tech knowledge. All you say is, of course, true, but over on the KompoZer forum (Dare I mention that here?:-) ) I found that many newbies expected that a web template would solve all their web design problems. It never did. The trouble is that many, come to web design with only experience of word processing and desktop publishing behind them and a complete lack any understanding of 'styles', even in the applications they are used to. Most only know how to apply visual effects to their documents by clicking on various toolbar buttons and don't consider semantics at all. These folk download a web template they like the look of and start using the same techniques they are used to and get in a hopeless mess.
Rockman.exe episode 2 sub indo mkv. (That's when they start posting questions on the support forums.) The result is that I always used to advise that people should consider that web templates are for coding geeks that understand HTML and CSS but lack graphic design skills. They are NOT for those who recognise good graphic design but know nothing of HTML and CSS. What this means is that there is no substitute for learning the principles that underpin HTML and CSS before one starts work on web design and no point in looking for templates until you are at that stage. (You don't need to know all the intricacies of of every HTML tag and attribute or CSS selector and element - BlueGriffon can look after that - but you do need to know the principles of what is going on under the hood. In the same way, while you can't drive a car until you understand the relationship between steering wheel, gear lever, accelerator, brake and clutch - yet you don't have to know about tappets, pistons and batteries.) Why am I bothering to say all this? Persamaan szm-173ev. Well, I'm a frustatrated KompoZer user and am thinking of adopting BlueGriffon and producing a BlueGriffon 'add-on', an extension to the official manual, that would introduce new web designers to the principles and techniques required - before they go looking for templates!