I am in Year 9 at school, and my class were set the task of making a
single Web page about quite a famous author and playwright called R.
C. Sherriff (he wrote Journey's End - a play about trench life in
World War One - which was a West End hit).
The computers in our I.T. Department currently run Microsoft Windows
NT 4.0 with various service packs and updates. The system setup is
quite common to the West Midlands schools, specifically those in the
Telford & Wrekin area of the UK.
Anyway, each computer has a preloaded version of Office 97 and
Publisher 98. I am quite experienced with computers (having one since
I was 8, learning to touch type quickly and programming using QBASIC
and C++), and noticed that there was no "real" software for us to use
to make Web pages. OK, OK, there was Word and Publisher - however,
these would produce unnecessary gabble: which is what I'm about to get
to.
Publisher 98, which is what most people in my class used to produce
their Web page, is (in my opinion) pathetically poor at creating Web
sites and Web pages. The hyperlink "feature" of the program sometimes
barely works - I know, I know, there's probably an "update" to fix
this... - and instead of actually writing the page in good ol' HTML it
makes a BIG picture of it and slaps it onto the page!
For example, my friend's site (at http://www.geocities.com/rcsherriff)
is all made of pictures - and the main text and document is a total of
42KB in size! Also, this would not be compatible with a lot of old
browsers or, more specifically, text browsers. So, to finish off, I
would just like to say how appalled I am at Microsoft's (maybe old)
attempt to transform Publisher into a piece of Web design software.
Anyone disagree?
David Bartosik - MS MVP - 30 Jun 2003 17:42 GMT
MS has no intention of making Publisher "web design software". That's what
they have FrontPage for. As a "desktop publishing and business marketing
tool" Publisher simply supports web pages.
As for getting a picture of a page instead of text and separate images that
is due to the user overlapping and/or layering page objects. Since the html
doesn't support that Publisher generates an image to attempt to reproduce
what the user created.
This is covered on my sites FAQ page (site address below).
For more details on this and on more web topics I suggest you visit my sites
page covering version 2000, as the topics are applicable to version 98.
We also have our own forum at microsoft.public.publisher.webdesign

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David Bartosik - Microsoft MVP
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for Publisher and Web Design
Tips and How-to's.
> I am in Year 9 at school, and my class were set the task of making a
> single Web page about quite a famous author and playwright called R.
[quoted text clipped - 28 lines]
> attempt to transform Publisher into a piece of Web design software.
> Anyone disagree?
Ed Bennett - 30 Jun 2003 18:36 GMT
Whilst attempting to develop brick-based storage technology, Ed reads a
message from James Greenwood <jhgreenwood@hotmail.com>
> Publisher 98, which is what most people in my class used to produce
> their Web page, is (in my opinion) pathetically poor at creating Web
> sites and Web pages. The hyperlink "feature" of the program sometimes
> barely works - I know, I know, there's probably an "update" to fix
> this... - and instead of actually writing the page in good ol' HTML it
> makes a BIG picture of it and slaps it onto the page!
a) This is Publisher 98. 2003 is due for release soon (although it makes
even bigger and less standardised code than 98)
b) Consider yourself lucky - we have Windows 95 and Publisher 97 at our
school
c) Publisher is a DTP application. It is not intelligent enough to do
sensitive creation of web pages to a specific user's requirements from an
artist's impression-type thing on screen with proper HTML, so it creates
images instead.

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Ed Bennett - MVP Microsoft Publisher
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