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If you're a non-professional, then you want to stay away from the professional products.
#EVERWEB UPDATE WHEN PRO#
As an old pro with a lot more experience than those young pros, I urge readers to ignore the mud hurled by the young pros they're just trying to show off how smart they are. We're seeing the same thing going on here: professionals demeaning products meant for nonprofessionals. That's how Windows ended up with a bigger user base than Mac. Sadly, beginners accord far too much credence to professionals, and end up struggling with the most gawd-awfully inappropriate applications. I respect the tough trade-offs that a developer must make in juggling accessibility against power. I've been programming for fifty years now, and I have forgotten more technical information than these kids know. I have never understood why these people have to pee all over products for nonprofessionals. These techie-geeks are the same people who insisted that MS-DOS was superior to GUI user interfaces. It has less power than, say, Adobe Dreamweaver, but lacks the steep learning curve. EverWeb is obviously a product for nonprofessionals. On this page, the people claiming that the positive reviews are posted by the developer are probably just one person using sock puppets.Īnother common source of dissatisfaction is the techie-geek reaction to a product for civilians. These are most readily identified by the repetition of a single uncommon statement. Some angry customers are so mean-spirited that they post multiple nasty reviews using sock puppets. Some people get angry over the oddest things, and then they post "revenge reviews" that attack the product for every conceivable sin. I suspect that those nasty reviews come from two sources. Clearly, a lot of people love EverWeb, but there are some strikingly nasty reviews. I read through all the comments posted here and I was struck by the diversity of opinion. The three most likely candidates appear to be EverWeb, Sparkle, and blocs. I'm a refugee from the now abandonware Sandvox, researching likely replacements. Our family book club uses the latest things I learned about EverWeb to design it. have several sites, some for business and others for fun.
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So my growth using EverWeb continues to this day. In the last year I have taught myself to use EverWeb for "responsive" sites. I have used it "ever since." I have upgraded the product as needed, and added widgets that I wanted. I used iWeb until it was discontinued and then switched to EverWeb.
#EVERWEB UPDATE WHEN MAC#
This project was what got me started in using Apple products in general and what got me to keep my Mac computer. But I made a promise to myself that I would do some "project" on the iMac before I replaced it. I told my wife that I really did not see that much difference with a Windows computer and that I was thinking of going back to Windows. I used it the first year only to surf the web and to see email. Then at some point we got an iMac computer. I have used everweb since "forever." When my daughter was a little baby (she is 20 now) I began taking online tutorials on web design.
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