TidBITS#391/04-Aug-97
=====================

  Wondering how to manage your money at Macworld Expo? This week's
  issue brings you shopping advice and a look at Expo purchases
  we've made in the past. This week we also introduce a new
  sponsor - Hitachi and its new MPEG camera - and note news of
  a merger between top Macintosh magazines. Finally, Tonya wraps
  up her seven part article about Web publishing software with a
  look at Microsoft FrontPage and NetObjects Fusion.

Topics:
    MailBITS/04-Aug-97
    New TidBITS Sponsor Releases Versatile MPEG Camera
    Macworld Expo: Planning for a Shopping Frenzy
    Spinning the Web Part 7: FrontPage, Fusion, and Final Thoughts

<http://www.tidbits.com/tb-issues/TidBITS-391.html>
<ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/pub/tidbits/issues/1997/TidBITS#391_04-Aug-97.etx>

Copyright 1997 TidBITS Electronic Publishing. All rights reserved.
   Information: <info@tidbits.com> Comments: <editors@tidbits.com>
   ---------------------------------------------------------------

This issue of TidBITS sponsored in part by:
* APS Technologies -- 800/443-4199 -- <sales@apstech.com>
   Makers of M*Power Mac OS compatibles & premium storage devices.
   APS price lists: <http://www.apstech.com/aps-products.html>

* Northwest Nexus -- 800/539-3505 -- <http://www.nwnexus.com/>
   Professional Internet Services. <info@nwnexus.com>

* Power Computing -- 800/375-7693 -- <info@powercc.com>
   PowerTower Pro 250 MHz - the fastest desktop system ever.
   Build Your Own Box online! <http://www.powercc.com/>

* Small Dog Electronics -- Special Deal for TidBITS Readers!
   UMAX S6E 600 DPI Color Scanner with PhotoDeluxe CD, NEW: $189
   For Details: <http://www.smalldoggy.com/#tid> -- 802/496-7171

* StarNine Technologies -- 800/525-2580 -- <info@starnine.com>
   Top Internet tools: WebSTAR, WebCollage, ListSTAR, and more.
   WebCatalog 2.0 free eval! <http://www.starnine.com/webcatalog/>

*  Hitachi Home Electronics, MP-EG1A camera -- 800/HITACHI <------- NEW!
   New camera records 20 minutes MPEG video, 3000 JPEGs or
   1,000 JPEGs w/ 10 seconds audio -- <http://www.mpegcam.net/>
   ---------------------------------------------------------------

MailBITS/04-Aug-97
------------------

**As Apple Turns** -- With the dense fog of rumors that have
  cloaked Apple in the past few weeks, you might wonder where our
  coverage of that fog has been. We're sick of press reports about
  Apple that sound like bad daytime soap operas. Once actual events
  of importance occur, which is likely to happen at Macworld Expo,
  we'll write about them and what they mean. Until then, we are
  skipping write-ups about Steve Jobs being coy, Larry Ellison
  playing Jealous Deity, and rumors of Pamela Anderson taking over
  clone licensing negotiations. [ACE]


**MacUser & Macworld Merge** -- The breaking news of the past week
  is that rival publishing empires IDG and Ziff-Davis have created a
  new joint company called Mac Publications that will consolidate
  Macworld, MacUser, and MacWEEK. MacUser and Macworld will merge
  into a single monthly magazine, whereas MacWEEK will continue as a
  weekly news magazine. We'll look more at the details and
  ramifications in a later issue. [ACE]

<http://www.macworld.com/daily/daily.1494.html>
<http://www.zdnet.com/zdnn/content/zdnn/0801/zdnn0008.html>


New TidBITS Sponsor Releases Versatile MPEG Camera
--------------------------------------------------
  by Tonya Engst <tonya@tidbits.com>

  Hitachi joins TidBITS this week as a sponsor to publicize the
  release of the MPEG Cam, a new camera for Macintosh users, which
  debuts at Macworld Expo (Booth 1530). The MPEG Cam - aimed
  primarily at digital professionals - comes with a 260 MB PC Card
  that stores 20 minutes of digital video (at 30 frames-per-second)
  in full-motion MPEG format, 3,000 still-image JPEG images, 1,000
  still-image JPEGs with 10 seconds of audio, or 4 hours of digital
  audio. Video resolution is 352 by 240 pixels; JPEGs are 704 by
  480.

<http://www.mpegcam.net/>

  The camera has a small "media navigation" screen that enables file
  management tasks like moving files into different folders, playing
  them back, or deleting them. The camera comes with a battery
  charger plus two batteries (each should last for 40 minutes and
  has a 100-minute recharge time). Files can be transferred to any
  PowerPC-based Macintosh (with System 7.5 or later and 10 MB of
  free RAM) by way of the SCSI port or - for some PowerBook users -
  via a Type III PC Card. Fully loaded with a battery and PC card,
  the camera weighs 19 ounces.

  Rob Burr, webmaster for the Hitachi MPEG Camera Network, described
  the camera as "the multimedia webmaster's secret weapon. I used
  the MPEG Cam recently to capture 1,024 images and a number of VRML
  movies for a Web site about the island of Providenciales in the
  Turks and Caicos Islands. The cost of traditional film,
  developing, and Photo CD scans would have exceeded $4,000 on this
  job."

<http://www.provo.net/>

  Although the $2,400 suggested retail price puts the MPEG Cam out
  of reach of general consumers, those who work with photographs or
  movies for a living, and especially those who work for news-
  related Web sites, may find it a must. I'm pleased that Hitachi
  released a Mac version of the camera and welcome them as a
  sponsor.


Macworld Expo: Planning for a Shopping Frenzy
---------------------------------------------
  by Tonya Engst <tonya@tidbits.com>

  This week's Boston Macworld Expo has many purposes, but an
  important one is the opportunity to buy geek goodies.

<http://www.mha.com/macworld/mwbos97/index.html>

  Adam and I have purchased our share of winners and losers over the
  years, and - in the interest of helping attendees avoid costly
  mistakes - I thought I'd share our experiences. We've generally
  purchased devices that might help prevent and alleviate repetitive
  stress injuries. Although we are both quite functional at the
  moment, we've had our share of carpal tunnel syndrome and
  tendonitis.


**Gotta Hand It to Them** -- Adam made our first Expo purchase - a
  pair of Handeze gloves. Made from a stretchy material, these
  finger-less gloves claim to provide support, circulation, and
  massage to wearers' hands and wrists. As Adam reported in
  TidBITS-199_, the gloves turned around his carpal tunnel
  syndrome and enabled him to meet the deadline for the first
  edition of Internet Starter Kit for Macintosh. Subsequently, my
  pair made an enormous difference in alleviating my tendonitis.
  Although new to the computer scene then, Handeze gloves are
  common now, and the $20 gamble paid off for us. Want your own
  pair? Check out a Handeze distributor's Web site (where you can
  find the important sizing information), or use our primary source,
  TidBITS sponsor APS (the sizing chart is in APS catalogs as well).
  APS Technologies -- 800/443-4199 -- <sales@apstech.com>

<http://www.handeze.com/>
<http://www.apstech.com/>


**No Wrist for the Weary** -- More recently, Adam purchased a
  Comfort Point, a movable wrist wrest that uses velcro to attach to
  a mouse or trackball. This device cradles your wrist on a "contour
  paddle," a padded, curvy platform that can be set to several
  different positions. The Comfort Point's goal is to help you
  control the mouse using your arm or fingers, but not your wrist.
  Although Adam and I still have minor RSI flare ups, neither of us
  found the device compelling; it cluttered our desks and made
  moving between the keyboard and mouse difficult. Still, at $20
  (show special) it was worth a try, and it still strikes me as a
  valid concept. Comfort Point -- 310/305-8931 --  800/429-3746
  310/305-8731 (fax) -- <orders@comfortpoint.com>

<http://www.comfortpoint.com/>


**Run for Cover** -- Like the character Cat in the Red Dwarf TV
  show, I'm attracted to shiny things. I couldn't resist spending a
  mere $5 for a translucent, purple plastic mouse cover. The cover
  snugs around the top and sides of my mouse and has a hole for the
  cord. It features raised ribs above the palm rest and little nubs
  over the mouse button. The ribs and nubs are supposed to increase
  circulation and afford better mousing precision. I haven't noticed
  any change in circulation or precision, but I've certainly
  received $5 worth of enjoyment from the cover. Unfortunately, I've
  lost the name of the company who sold the cover.


**Keyboarding up with the Joneses** -- One of my pet peeves is
  that extended keyboards extend to the right, forcing right-handers
  to reach an extra few inches to reach the mouse. I'd rather have
  directional and numeric keys at the left and keep the mouse closer
  at hand. As such, at Macworld Expo, January 1996, I was looking
  for a keyboard that would meet this requirement. I found it in a
  Datadesk TrackBoard keyboard, which had not only cool purple
  function keys, but also a trackball mounted at its right side,
  exactly where I thought it should be. I gleefully ordered the
  keyboard at the show special price, complete with an optional,
  separate ADB numeric keypad. The keyboard arrived promptly, but
  soon had to be exchanged - despite extensive troubleshooting,
  devices on the ADB bus tended to be inoperable after booting up,
  and - if I did manage to restart with everything working - the
  trackball tended to get stuck such that the mouse pointer would
  move in only one direction.

  Unfortunately, after a few weeks, the new keyboard acted up just
  as the old one had. Given that the fourth edition of Internet
  Starter Kit for Macintosh had taken over my life, the second
  keyboard spent six months lying on the floor, next to the first
  keyboard that I'd never sent back. Feeling negligent, I contacted
  Datadesk again. They were nice about the six month delay, and
  promised to try again. I returned the first two keyboards; they
  sent a third. The third arrived promptly, I hooked it up, and
  started typing. It worked okay, but triggered my tendonitis.
  Discouraged, I disconnected it. Someday, I'll try it again. In the
  meantime, our extended Macintosh family has many members, and the
  keyboard is ensconced on the Power Mac 7100 that runs our search
  engine. Datadesk -- 206/842-5480 -- 206/842-9219 (fax)

<http://www.datadesk1.com/>


**Smaller than a Bread Box** -- The Nada-Chair is a cloth
  contraption that rolls up into a small bundle but expands into a
  wearable chair. Adam bought it for me, thinking it might ease some
  lower back strain that I'd been experiencing. Unfortunately, I
  found the straps for attaching it so cumbersome that I ended up
  not using it. The chair worked fine for sitting, but when I stood
  up, I had to remove the Nada-Chair or walk around dangling limply
  drooping cloth straps. Perhaps if we attended more outdoor sports
  events or concerts, I'd try it again. I should note that TidBITS
  Contributing Editor Matt Neuburg owns a Nada-Chair and thinks it's
  worth the work to get in and out of it. Nada-Concepts
  800/722-2587 -- 612/644-4466 -- 612/644-4488 (fax)
  <info@nadachair.com>

<http://www.nadachair.com/>


**Bagging a Deal** -- Adam's most recent purchase was a large
  PowerBook bag from Tenba with optional backpack-style straps. Adam
  knew he wanted a bag big enough to hold a PowerBook, as well as
  our QuickTake camera, plus a snarl of cables and power adapters.
  He thought the back pack straps would be handy for mad dashes
  through airports, and he was absolutely correct. The bag has been
  a great success. Tenba -- 212/966-1013 -- 212/334-0841 (fax)
  <tenba@tiac.net>

<http://www.tenba.com/>


**Bigger than a Bread Box** --  Last summer, I decided to put
  aside my totally unrealistic expectation that most furniture
  should cost less than $100. It was time to buy an expensive,
  super-ergonomic desk chair. Because my feet often get tired at
  Macworld Expo, I figured I could combine resting my feet with
  chair shopping, and maybe track down a chair at the Expo.

  I found the ZACKBACK International booth, and later purchased a
  ZACKBACK posture chair, in a dreamy "Seashore" color. This $700 to
  $800 chair supports the thoracic portion of the back (just below
  the shoulders) and the sacral portion (at hip level), not the
  customary lumbar area. I was attracted to the ZACKBACK because
  I've always scooted lumbar supports as far down as they go, into
  the sacral region, because they feel more comfortable that way.

  In supporting the sacral and thoracic back regions, the ZACKBACK
  positions you in what its creator, physical therapist Dennis
  Zacharkow, thinks is the best sitting posture - straight and open,
  so body fluids circulate and nerves remain unpinched. When my
  chair arrived, it required some easily accomplished assembly, and
  then had to be adjusted. The adjustments were simple, but required
  a helper since I couldn't simultaneously sit in the chair and
  adjust it. Once the chair was adjusted, it fit me just right, but
  Adam, who is much taller, finds it almost impossible to sit in.

  I experienced a whiplash injury several years ago, and one thing I
  especially like about the chair is the way it puts my neck into a
  comfortable position. The chair hasn't cured my whiplash or caused
  all RSI problems to disappear, but I can sit in it comfortably for
  longer than I could in any previous desk chair, and definitely
  longer than I should. ZACKBACK International  -- 800/748-8464
  507/252-9293 -- 507/252-5150 (fax) -- <zmail@zackback.com>

<http://www.zackback.com/>


**Plan and Wait** -- Given the upbeat flow of Macworld Expo and
  the consumer feeding frenzy it engenders, attendees can easily
  blow out their budgets (one year, Apple had a denim jacket to die
  for, which I nearly succumbed to). Unless you have more money than
  you know what to do with, I recommend the two-tiered approach of
  plan and wait.

  First, make a spending plan. Attend the show with a firm handle on
  how much money you want to spend. (My first show was right after
  college, and my budget was a big fat zero.) Consider which
  products might be best purchased or seriously examined at the show
  and which will be easier to purchase through a different venue. If
  self-analysis reveals that you and your money tend to be easily
  separated, consider leaving your checkbook and credit cards behind
  when you actually attend the show. Most specials are available for
  a few days after the show, and many deals are also offered by way
  of flyers with mail-in forms.

  When evaluating a product for purchase at the show, plan
  carefully. Consider how you'll use the product in your everyday
  life. For instance, the Nada-Chair would have been fine if I sat
  still all day, but it didn't work well for moving around
  frequently. With software, issues like compatibility and RAM
  requirements are worth exploring before you purchase. Don't get
  sucked into the glamor of a product (like, say, a book about Java)
  and forget to consider whether you have time to use it.

  After the planning is over, it's time to wait. Wait until the end
  of the day to buy anything larger than a CD-ROM. Waiting means you
  have time to reconsider impulse buys, and you won't have to drag
  your purchase around all day. Many vendors at the show are happy
  to ship your purchases for you, saving the trouble of schlepping
  them home. Waiting until the final day of the show may turn up
  even cheaper prices. Better yet, and especially if you've already
  spent much of your budgeted Expo funds, wait until after the show.
  I'm not saying you should pass up special, now-or-never offers,
  but if there's no rush to buy, then wait. Waiting gives you more
  time to evaluate purchases on a rational basis or even provide
  time for that oh-so-necessary bug fix update.


Spinning the Web Part 7: FrontPage, Fusion, and Final Thoughts
--------------------------------------------------------------
  by Tonya Engst <tonya@tidbits.com>

  Have you ever encountered a Sesame Street book about Grover? The
  story concerns Grover (a blue-furred monster) who doesn't want you
  to turn the page, because there is a "monster at the end of the
  book." Well, we've almost reached the end of this series, and
  though there's no monster, there are two programs remaining -
  including one of woolly mammoth proportions.

  First, a correction. Gordon Meyer <grmeyer@ricochet.net>, wrote
  about CyberStudio (reviewed in TidBITS-387_ and TidBITS-390_) and
  noted: "Checking external links is available, and it works well. A
  nice feature is that when you add a new external link, CyberStudio
  can automatically verify it. If it's bad, you get a green bug icon
  in the Project window."

  This article looks at Microsoft FrontPage 1.0 and NetObjects
  Fusion 2.0. Feature-wise, FrontPage is most appropriately compared
  to Adobe PageMill/SiteMill, and at its $149 list price (with a $40
  rebate to owners of various Microsoft or Adobe products), it's in
  the same price category. Fusion (the woolly mammoth program) is
  more costly at $495.

<http://www.microsoft.com/frontpage/>
<http://www.netobjects.com/>


**Installing FrontPage** -- FrontPage is allergic to my Mac. After
  my first installation, I couldn't access the online help; for
  sites published locally, all body text was stripped out or garbage
  text appeared in the file; and I couldn't connect to my FTP server
  (this seems to be a common problem with NetPresenz, despite its
  position as probably the most common Macintosh FTP server).

  A call to Microsoft technical support revealed that my experience
  is atypical and yielded a series of steps for removing and re-
  installing the software (about fifteen items had to be plucked
  from the System Folder). After re-installing, my Mac and FrontPage
  still have serious differences, though the problems have changed
  slightly. Given my deadline, I've decided to patch together a
  review, but I'm hobbled by FrontPage not working correctly.

  Beyond my personal negative experience, FrontPage suffers two
  general problems that limit its utility. First, on my 604-based
  Power Mac 7600, it plods along, with delays bordering on the
  unacceptable. Microsoft's FrontPage press release says it is
  "optimized for" any PowerPC-based Macintosh running System 7.5.3
  or later with 16 MB free RAM (but 24 recommended), 30 MB disk
  space, and a CD-ROM drive.

  Second, for best results, a server running FrontPage server
  extensions must host your site. These features are much of what
  might make FrontPage attractive. They center around live editing
  like that offered by AOLpress (see TidBITS-386_); flexible uploads
  that only upload the changed portion of a site; the ability for a
  group to work on a Web site, complete with permissions for
  different pages and a shared To Do list; and the use of some of
  FrontPage's WebBots (also called "bots"), which handle backend
  processing for features like forms as well as page elements that
  only appear for a scheduled time period. (Not all bots require
  FrontPage server extensions: important goodies like automatically
  generated tables of contents and includes [where repeating site
  elements need only be changed once instead of in multiple
  locations] work locally.)

  Unfortunately, Microsoft has not released FrontPage server
  extensions for any Mac servers, and, if your ISP runs Windows or
  Unix boxes, you'll want to confirm that it has installed the
  FrontPage server extensions. I asked Microsoft to set me up with a
  temporary account on a server running FrontPage extensions, but
  they were unable to do so in time.


**Exploring FrontPage** -- Like Adobe's PageMill/SiteMill combo,
  FrontPage includes two applications: Editor and Explorer. Explorer
  controls sites and offers a Folder view with similar features to
  the site outline view in SiteMill. A Hyperlink view lets you click
  a file in a site outline at the left and then - at the right - see
  a visual representation of what files link to and from that file
  (though my Mac only shows links from the file as does the
  screenshot in the printed manual). GoLive's CyberStudio has a
  similar view, but in CyberStudio you can click any file showing in
  the visual representation to make it the focus and in this way
  move through a site. FrontPage can check and repair relative and
  external links, and its external link checker works nicely in the
  background.

  Explorer also has a multi-file spelling checker and basic multi-
  file Find. (Editor has a Replace command.) Both work by running
  through the entire site (or portion) and then - from a list of
  pages with a typo or found text - let you add pages to the To Do
  list or correct them individually. The file-by-file technique for
  making corrections goes terribly slowly.


**A Plain Jane Editor** -- Editor most closely compares to popular
  visual editors such as Home Page, PageMill, and Visual Page (see
  TidBITS-386_). However, these three programs are much more like
  one another than like FrontPage. FrontPage does most formatting in
  modal dialog boxes instead of via palettes or "Inspector"
  windoids. This annoyance is increased by FrontPage's tortoise-like
  pace. FrontPage also lacks drag & drop features: table elements
  can't be sized by dragging and it cannot accept files dropped in
  from the Finder (it can accept files from Explorer, but slowly).
  FrontPage lacks an internal preview, and its HTML view is the most
  mediocre of the lot.

  Given Microsoft's years of experience with Word, I was
  disappointed that the Editor lacks many common keyboard shortcuts
  for moving the insertion point and cannot intelligently insert an
  extra space if you drop a word between two other words. (Visual
  Page and PageMill share the drag & drop problem.) On the plus
  side, Editor has multiple undos

  Microsoft's experience with tables does come through, however.
  It's easy to add and delete any number of rows or columns from any
  portion of the table, and it takes just a flick of the wrist to
  select a row or column quickly. It's possible to apply text
  formats like strong (the Bold command automatically applies a
  strong HTML tag!) and cell formats (like background color) to some
  (but not any imaginable) contiguous groups of cells. (This key
  feature is available in Visual Page and to some degree in
  PageMill, but only slightly in CyberStudio and not at all in Home
  Page.) Working with tables would be nearly perfect if you could
  use drag & drop to size table elements and the table-related
  dialog boxes were modeless. FrontPage also supports image maps and
  frames. You add a frameset through a flexible wizard, though I
  can't determine if you can view pages within their frames in a
  frameset.


**Forge Ahead with Fusion** -- Like FrontPage, Fusion requires a
  PowerPC-based Mac. It requires at least System 7.1.2, 16 MB free
  RAM, 20 MB free disk space (80 MB recommended), an 8-bit color
  monitor with 800 by 600 pixels, and a CD-ROM drive. Fusion is also
  available for Windows, which shows in some interface aspects,
  though the program's interface is fairly unique. Of the programs
  I've looked at so far, with the possible exception of Frontier,
  Fusion was the hardest to learn.

  Fusion has several modules that you switch among by way of buttons
  in a common toolbar. Site creation happens in Fusion's Site
  module. As you might expect, it has an outline view that works
  like those in SiteMill and FrontPage. It also offers an
  organization-chart like view. You use these views to create dummy
  pages for an entire site rapidly. There's also a separate Publish
  module for uploading a completed site.

  The Page module has page creation features ranging from mediocre
  to average but for a few unique and awesome capabilities. In
  particular, Fusion's killer feature is its pixel-perfect layout.
  Using the pixel-perfect layout, you can drag page elements about
  to any page location, much as you would in a desktop publishing
  program. Oddly, you cannot drag items in from the Finder. Some
  designers will see pixel-perfect layout as the coolest thing since
  sliced bread (in flying toasters); others will find it a show-
  stopper, since it's not optional (as it is in CyberStudio) and it
  turns Web pages into masses of table tags.

  The Master Border is another unique feature. When you begin a Web
  site, each page has one Master Border encompassing its entire
  outside edge. If you change anything in the border on any page,
  that change appears in all pages. Or, you can create a new Master
  Border, associate it with only some pages, and only those pages
  will change in tandem. You can easily insert navigation bars into
  Master Borders. These bars are a wonderful timesaver, but are
  difficult to create if links don't follow the logical hierarchy
  set in the Site module or make unexpected jumps within a site.

  Combine Master Borders and the automatic navigation bars with the
  AutoFrames feature and you reach webmaster nirvana - AutoFrames
  instantly converts the site (or site portion) into a frameset with
  the central layout areas (the parts inside the borders) and the
  page sides (optionally) becoming separate framed pages.

  Fusion lacks features for combining the efforts of multiple
  webmasters, but has important features like a remote link checker,
  a spelling checker, and extras like JavaScripts that insert
  buttons that highlight when a mouse waves over them.

  If you must whip up a large site in just a few days and lack time
  to learn HTML, Fusion is worth consideration. It also looks like a
  good tool for quickly experimenting with site layouts (you can
  rapidly switch among some 50 provided site styles, modify an
  existing style, or create your own). I see it as a wonderful
  program for a design firm that must pitch mocked up sites to
  clients and then quickly make changes as requested.


**DealBITS Discount** -- Cyberian Outpost is selling FrontPage to
  TidBITS readers at $134.95, a $5 discount from Cyberian's regular
  price of $139.95, and Fusion for $469.95, an $8 discount from
  Cyberian's regular price of $477.95.

<http://www.tidbits.com/products/front-page.html>
<http://www.tidbits.com/products/fusion.html>


**Recommendations and Favorites** -- I particularly like
  PageSpinner, BBEdit, Visual Page, and CyberStudio. Frontier
  represents a key choice for those who require sophistication and
  flexibility, though it's worth noting that - for those with the
  right technical knowledge - similarly powerful systems can be set
  up using software like HyperCard and SuperCard. PageSpinner and
  Home Page stand out as winners for novices, and PageMill is
  looking increasingly good, particularly for those who use Adobe
  products or for anyone looking for site management at a low price.
  FrontPage is unreasonably slow, but, should a faster version come
  out, I'd recommend it to those who enjoy using Microsoft products.
  Fusion costs a bundle but serves a unique audience that - for the
  most part - will gladly pay for the feature set.


**What to Make of It** -- No one Web publishing program suits
  everyone. Sites like TidBITS that keep some pages around for years
  require radically different software from sites whose pages are
  discarded after a few months. Further, as sites expand, they often
  require automation or database interactions, and this may require
  that your Web publishing software be scriptable.

  The best solutions often remain those cobbled together from a
  combination of text and visual editors, plus a few utilities and
  converters. I believe an opportunity exists for the first company
  to ship a scriptable site management program that works well with
  most HTML editors, only messes with text when it runs a spell
  check or updates links, and has oodles of carefully conceived
  features for uploading, downloading, multiple authors, and site
  synchronization.

  We've seen desktop applications expand into feature-laden
  dinosaurs. I believe this happens because the bulk of the profits
  comes from site licenses made to large organizations. A large
  organization will often sacrifice excellence for a feature list
  that tries to accommodate different types of users. This
  encourages mediocre programs because there's no time to both make
  them great and add lots of features. Whether all Web publishing
  software will go that way remains to be seen, but the idea that
  one program could accommodate most sites is ridiculous. I hope the
  future will bring us carefully designed applications that - though
  they may try to solve every Web publishing problem for some market
  segment - will also play nicely with other programs so that we can
  mix and match software as needed.



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