From: BreadWithSpam on
John <jwolf6589(a)NOSPAMgmail.com> writes:
> In article <4c122578$0$32027$c3e8da3(a)news.astraweb.com>,
> Warren Oates <warren.oates(a)gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > > Or just get yourself some space on a wiki. You could get yourself a
> > > quite nice site on Wikidot, for example, pay your $50 annually, lock
> > > down all the pages so nobody but you could edit them and you'd be good
> > > to go - you'd be able to edit from anywhere, on any computer. Copy
> > > and paste in all your stuff and, again, you're good to go.
> >
> > That's all good advice. I hope John is reading it. I know he has me in
> > his killfile (which is pretty un-Christian of him, I'd say) in case I
> > might destroy his faith.
>
> I have a hosting provider. How is wiki any better?

Unless the host is providing the wiki engine and set-up for you,
forget it. You're not prepared for that.

If, on the other hand, you use something like WikiDot, all you do is
name your site and start pasting content into the pages. It's that
easy. You don't need to do any HTML yourself at all.

Unfortunately, you cut out the other "good advice" I gave before
the part about the wiki. I really think the best thing for you is
something like iWeb or SandVox or RapidWeaver. Start a project,
paste in your content, hit the "publish" button and you're done.

The key for you no matter how you do it is "copy your content and
paste it in". You need to copy your content WITHOUT ALL THE HTML and
paste it unformatted into a web-page building program from scratch.


--
Plain Bread alone for e-mail, thanks. The rest gets trashed.