Portable [best] | Microsoft Frontpage 2003Many large corporations, manufacturing plants, and government agencies built massive internal intranets using FrontPage extensions. Modern editors (VS Code, Sublime) handle these old ASP or HTML files poorly. FrontPage 2003 remains the only WYSIWYG editor that can open these legacy sites without breaking proprietary FrontPage Server Extensions (FPSE). It was the go-to tool for small businesses, schools, and personal hobbyist sites (GeoCities, anyone?) during the early 2000s. It lowered the barrier to entry for web design, effectively democratizing the internet. In the rapidly evolving world of web development, tools come and go with startling speed. Frameworks rise and fall, and coding standards shift from HTML4 to HTML5 and beyond. Yet, amidst the constant churn of technology, there remains a curious, persistent demand for a software title that hasn't been updated in nearly two decades: . |
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Many large corporations, manufacturing plants, and government agencies built massive internal intranets using FrontPage extensions. Modern editors (VS Code, Sublime) handle these old ASP or HTML files poorly. FrontPage 2003 remains the only WYSIWYG editor that can open these legacy sites without breaking proprietary FrontPage Server Extensions (FPSE). It was the go-to tool for small businesses, schools, and personal hobbyist sites (GeoCities, anyone?) during the early 2000s. It lowered the barrier to entry for web design, effectively democratizing the internet. In the rapidly evolving world of web development, tools come and go with startling speed. Frameworks rise and fall, and coding standards shift from HTML4 to HTML5 and beyond. Yet, amidst the constant churn of technology, there remains a curious, persistent demand for a software title that hasn't been updated in nearly two decades: . |
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