RE: [Fed-Talk] DOIM-Approved HTML program for Mac?
RE: [Fed-Talk] DOIM-Approved HTML program for Mac?
- Subject: RE: [Fed-Talk] DOIM-Approved HTML program for Mac?
- From: "Coradeschi, Tom CIV USA AMC" <email@hidden>
- Date: Mon, 14 Jan 2008 08:31:33 -0500
- Thread-topic: [Fed-Talk] DOIM-Approved HTML program for Mac?
I can cast a vote for PageSpinner. I don't do any web pages here at work, but I do use it at home for my personal pages and find it to be very powerful and easy to use. http://www.optima-system.com/pagespinner/
Tom Coradeschi
Chief Systems Engineer - PM Close Combat Systems
NIPR: email@hidden
SIPR: email@hidden
-----Original Message-----
From: fed-talk-bounces+tom.coradeschi=email@hidden [mailto:fed-talk-bounces+tom.coradeschi=email@hidden] On Behalf Of William G. Cerniuk
Sent: Monday, January 14, 2008 6:55 AM
To: Villano, Paul Ch CIV USA TRADOC
Cc: Fed Talk
Subject: Re: [Fed-Talk] DOIM-Approved HTML program for Mac?
I always recommended either GoLive or Dreamweaver to the Army Homepage
webmasters and worked to get rid of Frontpage.. Now that GoLive has
been assimilated by Adobe, there is Adobe Dreamweaver for high end
HTML work.
As you note, MS FrontPage produces illegitimate HTML, not a tool for
professionals... Or even rookies. Just bad.
You might consider iWeb if you need a tool that is very fast to use,
although limited compared to Dreamweaver.
Rapidweaver is a rather nice tool with a very easy to use interface. A
bit more complex than iWeb but not nearly as complex or capable as
Dreamweaver.
For hard core HTML text editing, BBEdit cannot be beat. Its freeware
cousin TextWrangler is a an excellent tool as well. The former offers
color coded HTML editing (parses your code). The latter can be used
for HTML cleanup in the stated case.
Over 50% of the sites out there don't need the complexity or the power
of Dreamweaver. Elegant and sophisticated sites can be developed with
the two latter tools more quickly and maintained more easily than
Dreamweaver, usually with no HTML editing involved.. Unlike FrontPage,
the aforementioned all produce great code.
V/R
-Wm.
Time is Short and the Water Rises
(Sent from my iPhone)
On Jan 13, 2008, at 4:30 PM, "Villano, Paul Ch CIV USA TRADOC" <email@hidden
> wrote:
> Is there a DOIM-approved HTML program for Mac? I'd especially like
> something that can clean up the MS BS. :)
>
> I made the mistake of installing the MS Office 04 for Mac today. I
> don't know whether it's just a jinx with the name or what but it
> gave me problems immediately and removal was a pain. My thought was
> to just use Word for HTML docs since it had (in the Windows
> versions, anyway) the clean up engine for crap code but I couldn't
> find it in the Mac version and just ended up removing it (after
> removing some hair from my head in the process).
>
> Paul
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Shawn A. Geddis" <email@hidden>
> Date: Saturday, January 12, 2008 16:49
> Subject: Re: [Fed-Talk] Leopard security config timeline?
> To: Fed Talk <email@hidden>
>
>> On Dec 17, 2007, at 4:12 PM, Amanda Walker wrote:
>>> On Dec 17, 2007, at 4:00 PM, Rex Sanders wrote:
>>>> Anybody have any idea when the NSA/Apple security guidelines for
>>
>>>> Leopard
>>>> will be released?
>>>>
>>>> Many of us are independently writing STIGs once again. I hope
>> we
>>>> won't see
>>>> the long delays we saw for Tiger.
>>>>
>>>> Solaris 10 has been out for over a year with no NSA guidelines yet.
>>>
>>> In past interactions with NSA, I learned to never depend on
>>> estimates of timeliness, though DISA was sometimes a bit better.
>> If
>>> I needed a STIG now, though, I'd be writing one, stamping it
>>> "interim" or something, and expecting to use it for a year or two...
>>
>>
>>
>> The Security Configuration Guides are the results of collaboration.
>>
>> Historically, that was between Apple and NSA, but now includes
>> collaboration between all four groups: Apple, NSA, DISA, NIST.
>>
>> Current timelines would make it available somewhere around the end
>> of
>> the quarter.
>>
>> - Shawn
>> _____________________________________________________
>> Shawn Geddis Security Consulting Engineer Apple Enterpr
>> ise
>>
>>
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