Chapter 1: Setting up your Website

Section 3:    Get Your free HTML editor

 

 

 


 

The free html editor I use is called PageBreeze. If you already have dreamweaver, microsoft frontpage, or anoter program and are familiar with those, of course use what you are familiar with. If you have never built a webpage before, you have a few choices now.  You can actually just hire out this work to someone else. If you don’t want to build a webpage yourself, and don’t know anyone who can put this together for you, you can go to www.elance.com and hire this out for $50 to $100.

 

However, what we are going to do is going to be relatively simple (have simple websites instead of fancy ones) and you’ll probably want to be making numerous updates and adding content regularly. Because of that, I think it will probably be better for you in the long run to just learn how to do the basics yourself.

 

The software toggles between a "what you see is what you get" format and html-coding, so you really don’t have to know html-itself to make the pages. I show you a few key things in the video on this page to get you familiar with this program, but it really isn’t that bad, really more like using microsoft word to create a document than anything else.

 

You can download the program here, and I’ll even show you how to access the free templates in the video too. (Note that there are also plenty of other places where you can download free templates or buy some as well, usually for about $20 or so. Just google "free web templates" or "website templates" to get some.

 

The next thing to learn is how to upload your webpages once you make them. That is really easy and straight-forward. I’ll show you how to get a free program that does that, and show you a quick video of me doing that on the next page.

 

Learn how to upload your webpages here….

 


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