Hidden Web and E-mail Devices part 4
One of the latest advanced web development software is: 1st Page 2006, designed to offer 4 user modes: Easy, Normal, Expert, and–for Web geniusesâ€â€ÂÂHardcore. But even the Easy mode offers an amazing array of prefab DHTML, Javascript, and PHP scripts that add menus, buttons, animation, calendars, pop-ups, and other effects to your pages.
Though the WYSIWYG design mode is nice, I like writing HTML directly in the program’s basic three-pane display, which shows the source code, a preview, and a handy reference list of HTML tags.
Next let’s look into e-mail programs.
The now famous Thunderbird, offers natural e-mail features like IMAP, HTML, POP3 support with spelling checking or spam filtering. It also includes RSS newsfeed support and professional protection against several attacks. Thunderbird’s interface is quite intuitive and clean, offering support for multiple machines.
Firefox Portable is (as its name clearly indicates) a porable version of Firefox that runs from a USB drive. Users can benefit from a whole suite of portable applications, including the Mozzila Foundations’s Thunderbird e-mail program. You can perform professional environment browsing customization.
Thunderbird Portable, however, is a version of Thunderbird’s e-mail application; this version has been configured solely for portability, maintaining a single e-mail inbox.
One of the advantages of this program is that users can store their e-mails on their USB drives. Thunderbird Portable provides HTML mail, spelling checking, spam filtering, RSS newsfeed support and POP3 support.
Eudora is a classy e-mail client, which offers a whole set of fine features including incoming mail filters, HTML messages, spelling checking, Gmail-like labels. As I’ve come to find out, the software will go open source. Earlier versions will automatically revert to light mode (which omits certain features such as spelling checking, multiple identities, stationery, and signatures) after that date.















