I've been a user of FrontPage since before Microsoft purchased it ~ten years ago. In fact, my first day as an employee of Microsoft in Redmond coincided with the first days of the FrontPage folks who moved to Redmond as new MS employees. We all went thru the famous first-badge process together. I was jealous... I would very much have liked to work on that team!
I created my series of websites (DrivingEnthusiast.net, S2000Enthusiast.com, etc) with FrontPage, and I could not possibly have gotten to the point of several thousand pages and images without powerful tools such as FrontPage. How these sites ever get this large? FrontPage is the enabler. I could not have done it otherwise. Literally impossible.
I'm not a professional web site developer and never have been (that much is clear from my site!). I have no formal website coding or design training. So without any background, FrontPage has provided the means to create and manage these sites. It's simple and straightforward. I've even got several friends as well as my Mom using FrontPage for their own sites!
But things change, industry standards evolve, and FrontPage was getting in need of an update. That came in the form of "Expresson Web", which replaces FrontPage.
Don't listen to the marketing hype from Microsoft - this is simply a new version of FrontPage and is not an all-new product. It may have been rewritten a bit under the covers, and it does get new branding and join a family of Expression products. But you or I can use Expression Web in the same exact way as we'd been using FrontPage all along.
There are two very important things to note about Expression Web:
- there is considerable new function
- the product is very clearly aligned wth industry standards.
So we can now build a better site: one more closely aligned with industry standards, one that will work better on more client platforms that support these standards, a site that is consistent across all of it's pages (a particular problem with my sites), and one that is more easily extensible going forward.
But how do I get started on the "migration" of my site? Well, Expression Web opens my FrontPage site the same way Frontage does. You edit the site the same way. It publishes the changes the same way. So, I already have Expression Web (I was in the beta program) and it's transparent to me.
But that doesn't mean I'm exploiting the new power of Expression Web. Not one iota. And this is my task for the next few months... to figure out a good way to get started exploiting what it can do. That means developing a template... working thru the QuickStart Guides, choosing places to use XML (my lits of movies on CarMovieEnthusiast.com?). And leveraging CSS far more extensively.
I want to develop a section of my site where I show "regular people" - non-developers - how to use Expression Web for a "hobbyist"type site such as mine. I'm planning on doing that in my usual way - meaning lots of graphics and examples. Look for it!