Sonny's idea is a good one.  Also, many ISPs offer free web space to their
account holders.  Earthlink, for example, allows a basic account holder up
to eight mailboxes and email addresses with their basic dial-up account. 
Each mailbox comes with 10mb of free web space, which is more than enough
to put up quite a few photos.  More space may be better for a full-blown
web site, and usually for a few dollars more per year it's available.

Photoshop has a number of web page templates built into it, so if you've
got a recent version of PS you've already got some customizable web page
designs on your hard drive.   You've no need to know anything about HTML
coding to get these pages up and running, although with a little very basic
HTML knowledge you can tweak the designs and formats a bit to suit your own
needs and preferences. With PS CS (and, I assume, CS2), there's "Goodies"
file on the install disk which includes web page templates from earlier
versions of PS.  I know that PS 7, CS, and CS2 offer these web templates,
some of which are interactive in that visitors can click a link and send
you comments about the photos, or even place an order for one.  I think PS
6.0 may also have such templates, but I don't have the disk handy to say so
with absolute certainty.

Shel 


> [Original Message]
> From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: <pentax-discuss@pdml.net>
> Date: 7/3/2005 5:44:54 AM
> Subject: Re: Recomendations on where to upload public images
>
> If you are not destitute, I would highly  recommend getting your own
website 
> with your own url.  They vary widely in  price, but a modest amount of
space 
> can be less than $5 a month, and you get to  choose the format, you get
to pick 
> your own backgrounds, if you findyou need to  make a simple change, it
takes 
> moments.  
>
> Most of the group sites  are hard to navigate if someone is looking
through 
> just your stuff.  It is  not hard to learn to do a site.  
>
> I now use Frontpage to create and  manage sonc.com, and while it is not
the 
> best, it is what I know and I don't  want to struggle with changing now
that my 
> site has such girth.  
>
> My  webhost is  a coop, and it is very inexpensive, and as far as I know
has  
> had about 30 minutes of downtime in the two plus years I have been with 
it.  
> A good place to start price wise to get your registry and hosting in  one 
> place is www.godaddy.com . 
>
> Regards,  
> Sonny
> http://www.sonc.com
> Natchitoches, Louisiana
> Oldest continuous  settlement in La Louisiane
> égalité, liberté, crawfish
>


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