This application makes it easy to publish websites, weblogs, intranets and portals
Version | 9.5 |
Updated | Feb 16th 2010 |
Developer |
UserLand Software
N/A
N/A
|
User Rating |
888
3.1
|
Original File Size | 6.6 MB |
Downloads | 6445 |
Systems | Windows All |
Category | Internet |
UserLand's Frontier website and weblog publishing system makes it simple for anyone to create and use web content, collaborate on projects, manage online discussion groups, podcast and share documents. Offering amazing functionality, Frontier also comes with built-in tools that make it easy to syndicate your web content via RSS.
Because the Frontier user-interface is browser-based, authorized content editors can use Frontier's industry leading Edit this Page functionality to update web pages and share content from any location. When you use Frontier to manage a website, there is no longer any need to call your IT department to fix typos or add information to a page. It's so easy to use, it is true to say that if you can type, you can edit a Frontier-created web page.
And Manila doesn't merely free your IT staff to pursue more high-value tasks, it helps everyone in your organization to use time more efficiently. With the built-in RSS news aggregator, members of your organization can subscribe to the information they need, such as internal project management sites or external business news. Frontier Crack will automatically organize all of this information on a single, easy-to-read page.
Merci beaucoup!
Baie dankie vir die patch Frontier
Your email will not be published. Required fields are marked as *
'Intense year' ahead, warned Zuck. Got to spend billions on AI and work to stay out of Trump's bad books
Opinion When your state machines are vulnerable, all bets are off
FOSDEM 2025 OKD project also has its own immutable CentOS image, which could be fun
Costs for fixing them and keeping them working up by 390%, NAO report reveals
Also claims it's found DeepSeek-eque optimizations that reduce AI infrastructure requirements
Open source project chief hits out at 'social media brigading'
Some of that cash is reportedly headed for $500B Stargate dream