Have you ever used Adobe Muse? Love, Lady Island.
Dear Lady Island,
Lately I’ve been waking up in the morning in a cold sweat on my couch because I get a lot of nightmares when I watch 27 to 36 episodes of Hoarders in a row. But the horrific prospect of a human being storing three to six tons of garbage in a home reminds me that I must maintain immaculate cleanliness in my dwelling space, and this is why I like Lysol so much. Next month, in fact, I will be pitching a brand of Lysol perfume to Reckitt, and it will be called “Healthy Moms.”
I like to suffer, Lady Island. And that assertion may sound peculiar on the face of it. But suffering is about shedding away the weight of the material world, which is inescapable, in pursuit of an essential oneness with the self. But to be one with the self is to be locked in a constant struggle against limitation.
Web development is very much like this.
To answer your question, I have not used Adobe Muse, but I have read about it. The short of it is that Muse is basically Microsoft Frontpage or Dreamweaver in “Design Mode” for 2012. It generates non-semantic code in fixed layouts, which is a hopelessly dated approach to creating websites given a Web that is now relying on things like responsive design. Muse, even in beta, is light years behind the expectations of users who want extremely dynamic websites that function across multiple platforms.
Implicit in the subtle but arrogant introductory video of Muse is the idea that somehow a program will supplant the programmer. I would really like that, because it would mean I can finally retire to Alaska and own forty Siberian huskies to write Harlequin romance novels, but I’m not cashing in my 401k just yet.
Lately I’ve been waking up in the morning in a cold sweat on my couch because I get a lot of nightmares when I watch 27 to 36 episodes of Hoarders in a row. But the horrific prospect of a human being storing three to six tons of garbage in a home reminds me that I must maintain immaculate cleanliness in my dwelling space, and this is why I like Lysol so much. Next month, in fact, I will be pitching a brand of Lysol perfume to Reckitt, and it will be called “Healthy Moms.”
I like to suffer, Lady Island. And that assertion may sound peculiar on the face of it. But suffering is about shedding away the weight of the material world, which is inescapable, in pursuit of an essential oneness with the self. But to be one with the self is to be locked in a constant struggle against limitation.
Web development is very much like this.
To answer your question, I have not used Adobe Muse, but I have read about it. The short of it is that Muse is basically Microsoft Frontpage or Dreamweaver in “Design Mode” for 2012. It generates non-semantic code in fixed layouts, which is a hopelessly dated approach to creating websites given a Web that is now relying on things like responsive design. Muse, even in beta, is light years behind the expectations of users who want extremely dynamic websites that function across multiple platforms.
Implicit in the subtle but arrogant introductory video of Muse is the idea that somehow a program will supplant the programmer. I would really like that, because it would mean I can finally retire to Alaska and own forty Siberian huskies to write Harlequin romance novels, but I’m not cashing in my 401k just yet.
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