Press Release
August 30, 2005
FrontPage 2003: The Missing Manual: Create Customized, Cool Web Pages
Sebastopol, CA--FrontPage 2003 is an amazing program when you want the
instant gratification of your web site online right now. But for many
people, once the first flush of pride at having built a web page subsides,
a growing sense of dissatisfaction follows. Your web site, after all,
doesn't do as much as you'd like it to, and it looks like thousands of
other FrontPage-created web pages. Maybe you want a drop-down menu, or a
search box, but you don't want to have to master a new programming
language to get it. The good news is: you don't have to. You can trick out
your webpage with all kinds of cool features using FrontPage--it's now far
more flexible and also includes support for Flash and XML. The bad news
is, for those things, FrontPage isn't so intuitive. The one feature
you'll find yourself wishing FrontPage had is a printed manual.
"If you have specific ideas about what should go on your web site and how
everything should look, FrontPage's cookie-cutter solutions probably
aren't flexible enough for you," says Jessica Mantaro, author of the
newest in David Pogue's Missing Manual Series, FrontPage 2003: The Missing Manual (O'Reilly, $29.95). "The program's reputation for
automating everything may even disturb you. Don't worry. You can bypass
the canned options and create a completely custom site. If you're a web
purist, FrontPage is now better than ever at getting out of your way."
It hadn't gone unnoticed at Microsoft that FrontPage users had to put up
with howls of contempt from their geek friends, or that the program has a
reputation for spitting out look-alike web pages with messy, overloaded
HTML code that took forever to load. In fact, Microsoft pumped up FrontPage
2003 with some pretty advanced features, including an HTML cleanup tool
that helps alleviate bloated code, and new support for Macromedia Flash
and XML. Now, savvy web veterans can control as much of the process as
they want, and even collaborate on a site with developers who use
Dreamweaver, GoLive or other web authoring tools. Yet, unlike those other
tools, FrontPage 2003 still has automated features for beginners who don't
know where to start.
"There's no shortage of existing books on FrontPage 2003," Mantaro
acknowledges. "But while there's a lot out there about this program, it's
easy for FrontPage web authors to get confused about what they'll need to
get their FrontPage web site online and which FrontPage features to use
when. This book cuts through the fog and lays out options and
requirements clearly."
The Missing Manual series boasts that they put the program's features in
context, with clear and thorough chapters that provide valuable shortcuts,
workarounds, and just plain common sense, no matter where you weigh in on
the technical scale.
FrontPage 2003: The Missing Manual lives up to that promise.
With it, you can learn to build simple web pages, or sophisticated ones
with tables and cascading style sheets, and find out how to manage and
publish a web site. You can also create forms, work with databases, and
integrate FrontPage with Microsoft Office.
If you haven't worked with web pages before, each chapter provides "Up to
Speed" sidebars with useful background information. If you do have
experience, the "Power Users' Clinic" sidebars offer advanced tips and
insights.
If you want to go beyond the obvious FrontPage features painlessly, you
need FrontPage 2003: The Missing Manual. If you're a geek that could
never admit to FrontPage usage, it's the perfect book to give to your Mom
when she asks you to create yet another family reunion web page--or the
guy down the street who wants your help posting the neighborhood soccer
scores online.
Additional Resources:
FrontPage 2003: The Missing Manual
Jessica Mantaro
ISBN: 0-596-00950-X, 434 pages, $29.95 US, $41.95 CA
order@oreilly.com
1-800-998-9938; 1-707-827-7000
About O'Reilly
O'Reilly Media spreads the knowledge of innovators through its books, online services, magazines, and conferences. Since 1978, O'Reilly Media has been a chronicler and catalyst of cutting-edge development, homing in on the technology trends that really matter and spurring their adoption by amplifying "faint signals" from the alpha geeks who are creating the future. An active participant in the technology community, the company has a long history of advocacy, meme-making, and evangelism.
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