It said the Mustafa Necati, the Star Helena, the Glory and the Riva Wind were carrying "around 170,000 tonnes of agriculture-related merchandise." Meanwhile, Moscow and Kyiv traded accusations over who bombed the Zaporizhzhia nuclear site in southern Ukraine, Europe's largest atomic power complex which has been under Russian control since the early days of the February 24 invasion. three from Chornomorsk and one from Odessa," Kyiv's infrastructure ministry wrote on Telegram. "The second convoy of Ukrainian supplies has just left. Good luck, Mickey!įour more ships loaded with grain set off from Ukrainian ports on Sunday, as Moscow and Kyiv blamed each other for a new strike at a Russian-occupied nuclear plant.
It's also a code editor more than a true WYSIWYG tool, and it's available from the MacRabbit website for $79.99.Īs usual, if you have a favorite Mac WYSIWYG HTML editor and wish to let other readers in on your personal choice, leave a comment below. MacRabbit's Espresso was a huge miss on my part. Very similar to HyperEdit is Taco HTML Edit ($24.99), which has a component library that can add amazing features to an HTML document. It's a code and text editor in the same vein as Coda. HyperEdit ($9.99) is another package from the Hype developers. Created by two ex-Apple engineers, it's gaining rave reviews and can be used to create animated websites. Hype sells for $29.99 in the Mac App Store and is an amazing HTML5 WYSIWYG editor. Those two solutions were covered in my previous post, " Ten ways to replace iWeb and MobileMe hosting."Īlso, you may wish to look at several other editors, some of which aren't really WYSIWYG, but are favorites of some of the bloggers here at TUAW: Update: Before anyone asks where RapidWeaver and Sandvox are, note that although they do have the capability to edit RAW HTML, they're both predominantly used to design new websites from scratch using built-in templates and then maintain those sites.
For that reason, and the fact that being able to edit his existing website on the Mac would keep him from having to do a complete reboot of the site, I figured he needed a Mac replacement for FrontPage - a Windows application that has been abandoned by Microsoft. Mickey wanted to redesign his website in iWeb, but had concerns about the future viability of the app. The way I see it, I have two options 1) use Boot Camp or VMWare Fusion to continue writing the webpage in FrontPage or 2) find a Mac program that might be at least relatively amenable to importing the HTML code from FrontPage." I've got hosting and a domain and all that, and I have coded it in Microsoft FrontPage.
In the interim, however, I have created a personal webpage (mostly for family).
One of our readers, Mickey, wrote to say that "I'm a former Mac user who was forced to switch to PC and has since come back to the Mac. OK, I'm sorry if I have been stuck on the theme of website creation lately, but the TUAW inboxes have been inundated with emails from readers who are concerned about the probable demise of iWeb.