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I have been using windows and dreaweaver etc for the last few years to create asp web pages and sites. But i am fed up of bill and his prices,vunrabilitys etc and would like to witch to linux ( i like unbuntu and fedora ) but what can i use instead of dreamweaver and photoshop? a list of software would be apreciated.
Also would there be any issues with using asp on apache for a large scale website?

2006-07-14 06:46:37 · 5 answers · asked by ADY 1 in Computers & Internet Programming & Design

5 answers

I don't know about ASP support, but Quanta is a good KDE IDE for web pages and apps.

The Gimp is a photo editing software comprable to Photoshop and it is supported on Windows and *Nix so you can test it out before transitioning.

As far as ASP on Apache, I think it will work as my company had been using ASP until a couple years ago when we transitioned to PHP.

Linux has very good comercial support for most needs, and the server technology far exceeds Windows, imo.

2006-07-14 07:29:18 · answer #1 · answered by John J 6 · 0 0

Linux isn't for individuals that "do not recognize something about pcs quite." homestead windows is. keep on with that until eventually you're able to analyze what's enthusiastic about operating Linux. this is come some distance, notwithstanding this is nevertheless no longer just about as common as homestead windows or Mac. you've lots to study.

2016-10-14 11:20:08 · answer #2 · answered by jackson 4 · 0 0

If you really need wysiwyg editting, use Amaya (www.w3.org).
You will also want a solid html editor. Quanta Plus
(You can use both, with QP great for scripts as well. Amaya has no 'project' capability, but QP has).

The GIMP is great for graphics.
http://www.gimp.org

As for asp on apache on linux (for testing), I "think" there is something available, but cannot say for sure. Asp will work on apache on windows.

2006-07-14 06:53:44 · answer #3 · answered by sheeple_rancher 5 · 0 0

linux has got most of its own software...theres loads of different versions too...asp is part of microsoft windows...so not sure on that one....but once you decide what operating system (linux based) that you are going to run you can then look for the linux software thats compatible...not sure if this will help..

2006-07-14 06:51:17 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Well, not a bad politically correct decision. But in my opinion its a bad commercial one. You will be very limited indeed. I also use Linux but for infrastructure tasks not commercial tasks.

2006-07-14 06:53:40 · answer #5 · answered by Jack 3 · 0 0

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