Blogging Kills FrontPage

I’ve been a Dreamweaver fan since the late ’90’s. Even today, I use it to tweak WordPress themes and plugins. No wonder it holds over 70% of the HTML editor market.

That’s why I do not mourn for Microsoft’s clunker of an HTML editor, FrontPage. This is what happens to a product with the arrogance to lock both client and server into expensive closed standards.

Microsoft FrontPage falls victim to blogging culture

It’s become obvious that FrontPage is going to be quietly dropped from the Beast of Redmond’s regular user orientated offerings – only to be replaced by professional design tools. Blogging sites are replacing personal Web sites for the average PC user.

Originally a classic part of Microsoft’s Office suite, FrontPage’s role will be taken care of by two new products – Expression Web and Sharepoint Designer. Both are blatantly aimed at “the professional Web designer” rather than ordinary PC users.

According to FrontPage’s own home page, “After nine years of being an award-winning (Mike: Yeah, right.) Web authoring tool, FrontPage will be discontinued in late 2006.”

My next bet for the Microsoft deadpool: Content Management Server. You can’t even blog on the damn thing.

(Via Abe Olandres.)

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Comments

2 Comments on “Blogging Kills FrontPage”
  1. Monkeylove says:

    I tried Expression Web and it looks pretty good. I think they also made one other product besides Sharepoint but I haven’t tried it. There are some more, like Windows Live Writer, which I find very helpful for web logs. Two more–WindowsCare and Defender–are useful.

  2. Mike Abundo says:

    I’ve tried Live Writer. It works great until you see the code it produces in the WordPress editor.

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