G Guest Apr 29, 2005 #1 Can anyone tell me whether FrontPage 98 and FrontPage 4.0 are the same product, or different versions? Are they compatible? thanks
Can anyone tell me whether FrontPage 98 and FrontPage 4.0 are the same product, or different versions? Are they compatible? thanks
R Ronx Apr 29, 2005 #2 FrontPage 4 is FrontPage 2000, a very different version of FrontPage from FP98. FrontPage 98 requires a webserver to build a website, FP2000 will handle disc-based webs, no server required for designing. FrontPage 2000 will handle unlimited and nested subwebs - FP98 is limited in number of subwebs, and cannot handle nested subwebs. FrontPage 2000 will do every thing FrontPage 98 will do, and more besides
FrontPage 4 is FrontPage 2000, a very different version of FrontPage from FP98. FrontPage 98 requires a webserver to build a website, FP2000 will handle disc-based webs, no server required for designing. FrontPage 2000 will handle unlimited and nested subwebs - FP98 is limited in number of subwebs, and cannot handle nested subwebs. FrontPage 2000 will do every thing FrontPage 98 will do, and more besides
G Guest Apr 29, 2005 #3 Perfect - thank you. Ronx said: FrontPage 4 is FrontPage 2000, a very different version of FrontPage from FP98. FrontPage 98 requires a webserver to build a website, FP2000 will handle disc-based webs, no server required for designing. FrontPage 2000 will handle unlimited and nested subwebs - FP98 is limited in number of subwebs, and cannot handle nested subwebs. FrontPage 2000 will do every thing FrontPage 98 will do, and more besides Click to expand...
Perfect - thank you. Ronx said: FrontPage 4 is FrontPage 2000, a very different version of FrontPage from FP98. FrontPage 98 requires a webserver to build a website, FP2000 will handle disc-based webs, no server required for designing. FrontPage 2000 will handle unlimited and nested subwebs - FP98 is limited in number of subwebs, and cannot handle nested subwebs. FrontPage 2000 will do every thing FrontPage 98 will do, and more besides Click to expand...