Remember this thread?Well, the plan has changed a little bit and I developed a temp payroll/invoicing system which works for the time being without it actually being web or cloud based. Not quite as automated as we were initially hoping for, but the direction of the company has changed a bit and the data we're working with is now a lot more straightforward so it all works out.
That said, we still want to get a website up and running. I've been talking to a few developers for the last week or so and it's kind of been a headache. It may be because all of these have been ones recommended to me by people I know and they're all trying to sell services above and beyond what I'm looking for ("We'll help streamline the online presence of your company so that it has one, cohesive voice"...no, motherfucker, you won't).
So, we're now looking at a cheaper (And far better for me, school-wise, plan): I'm going to be getting a pretty simple website up and running and we'll reassess the need to hire a webdeveloper for a more professional site when that time comes. So, I'm going to be building a static portfolio site: Front page, gallery, testimonials, contact info, and that's pretty much it. I'm not going to be coding shit here, so I'm probably going to be using a "What You See Is What You Get" web editor. I do, however have a couple of questions:
-Which editor to use? I was thinking of stealing a copy of Dreamweaver, but that might not be a good idea (I think?). Any good and free alternatives that anyone can reccomend?
-I have no idea which options to select for hosting. Well, I kind of do but don't know if I'm overlooking anything. I'm thinking about using Godaddy, because hey - Super Bowl ads work. The .ca name I want is reasonably priced (.com already taken) and with the cheapest hosting service on godaddy.com, I get the following:
10 GB Space
Unlimited Bandwidth
100 Email Accounts2
10 MySQL Databases (1 GB ea.)
I'm not going to hit 10 GB with what I'm doing here, need 2-3 email accounts at best, and don't even know what a MySQL database is, but don't think it applies to what I'm doing here. Is there anything I'm overlooking here?
-Are there any crucial steps I'm missing out on here? As far as I remember from building shitty sites for school (And assuming this works the same), it goes: register name, get hosting, design site, upload via FTP (or whatever) to site, publish...work on SEO.
I'm not being lazy and have browsed some reffresher tutorials and such (and plan on doing more of this), but figured that since some of you are pretty into this kind of stuff (and far more experienced in this category than myself), it'd be good to check with you guys for tips/advice/warnings. Any help would be greatly appreciated.