On Sun, Sep 11, 2011 at 4:25 PM, Nico Kadel-Garcia <nka...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On Fri, Sep 9, 2011 at 4:25 PM, Kevin Chadwick <ma1l1i...@yahoo.co.uk>
wrote:
>> On Fri, 09 Sep 2011 11:22:38 -0700
>> "Carlos A. Garcia G." B wrote:
>>
>>> ok ill try to find out how to puch the webmaster so he change his mind,
>>> let me get the info from the webmaster.
>>> the only reason he said its "Frontpage have a marvelous tools and with
>>> my frontpage i can upload the website without messing the ftp"
>>> hummm!

Only people which use and love Frontpage are people which are doing
similar pages with Frontpage http://www.700200.cz/

In short people for which it will be good idea to deny access at all
for www or anything from IT :-) It's better to fire those people from
company instead of trying to find ways around for their crap.

>>
>> See what he thinks of sftp (it is ssh not secure ftp making it
>> reliable, secure and silky smooth) with filezilla or gftp and never
>> look back.
>>
>> Dreamweaver supports sftp but only password based auth as far as the
>> latest version I've seen.
>
> The WWW consortium's tool, Amaya, also works quite well to avoid
> FrontPage's limitations. And it actually follows the standards for
> HTML encoding, correctly handling relative URL's, creating far more
> reliable and compatible web pages than Microsoft's tools.
>
> If the last avaiable version of FrontPage still supports it, and for
> many other tools which *do* support it such as the World Wide Web
> consortium's tool "Amaya", WebDAV is a much, much better protocol than
> FTP. It uses HTTP or preferably HTTPS, it's built into core UNIX and
> Linux system tools such as Subversion so it's well supported, it
> doesn't have the split data and command channel problems that FTP has
> always had at firewalls, and no one blocks outgoing HTTPS at their
> firewalls in environments where the web must be accessible. Many sites
> very casually block the SSH port 22 that SFTP uses (to my occasional
> regret, and often so that the proxy servers or intervening network
> tools can monitor user's traffic for content).
>
> I've helped several companies migrate from FTP to WebDAV over HTTPS
> with good success and excellent reliability. Is this open to you?

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