Thank you all. I got rid of my old code and am starting with new code from a
free template I downloaded. 

Mike Wohlrab 
Computer Technology Solutions 
585-944-3823 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
www.ComputerTechnologySolutions.org
FTP://MikeWohlrab.com


-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Ted Roche
Sent: Monday, June 18, 2007 9:29 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [NF] Need help with website design

On 6/17/07, Mike Wohlrab <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> My goals for the site are really to do a combination of advertising my
services
> and what I do and how to contact me and etc.

An admirable goal.

> It is also going to be used for an
> experience of building and maintaining a website as a learning experience and
> just to have a site and say I made this great website.

When talking with a new potential customer or partner, I do take a
look at their website. The design and content is important. As I'm
likely to be doing something with their web presence, I also take a
look at the code of their web site, and that can tell me a lot about
them.

You can see if you examine www.tedroche.com that the original layout
of the site was done in an older version of MS Word. Some of the older
style tags are still mso-this and mso-that. However, you'll also
notice that an awful lot of the site has been recoded since then into
hand-coded HTML. Some days it even passes the HTML and CSS validators
;). Hmm, I think it's due for an overhaul, too... some of it is
embarassingly bad.

> I am a single
> man company just trying to set up a website and I was just wondering how to
make
> the page center according to the width of the web browser similar to what
google
> does on their homepage or what Microsoft does.

Sticking <center> just after the body tag and </center> just before
the </body> tag will likely do it, but not in a particularly
satisfying way.

There are many good paths to get there. I'm one of those people who
likes to know all the ugly details of how things work, so I recommend
starting with a good text editor (Notepad Plus is a Windows port of
Scintilla, http://notepad-plus.sourceforge.net/uk/site.htm) and
editing all of the code by hand until you start to get the
interactions of HTML, CSS, Javascript, forms, etc. As someone else
pointed out, w3schools is a good reference, although not necessarily a
tutorial.

Another path is to use a content management system. Drupal or Joomla
or Xaraya or PHP Nuke do all the gritty work for you and can have you
up and running in minutes. Mastering all of the capabilities of one of
these tools can take a lifetime, as smart people have designed some
pretty cool things: templating languages, database interfaces, etc.
Several consultants in the are a are making a good living customizing
CMSes rather than writing a lot of stuff from scratch. While knowing
the basics is essential, working with high-level abstractions is a lot
more fun, imo.

Finally, the path you've tried with Publisher or other tools that
generate static HTML, is a path that I would advice against, beyond
the initial design stages. Static web sites were fine in the nineties
when all you wanted to do was establish an "Internet presence" ("me,
too!") but static sites are looking more like a dated Yellow-pages ad
and less like a ""real" website these days. While I think it *is*
important to have have that internet presence, I'd suggest you'd want
a site where you could more easily add content, offer more interaction
for your visitors, and perhaps even offer some private interaction
with your clients - closed forums or incident reporting sytems online
- that sort of thing.

Best of luck with it and don't hesitate to ask [NF] questions!

-- 
Ted Roche
Ted Roche & Associates, LLC
http://www.tedroche.com


[excessive quoting removed by server]

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