AnyFrontPage Bytes
'The Bit in the Middle'

Archives (Vol 1)

  
Editors; 
               Tina Clarke....         
               Tiffany Edmonds....
               Frances Stewart



http://accessfp.net/
http://at-frontpage.com/

"Typography is Alive and Well
 on the Web"

Issue 21
  - 30th April 2001

Please note some links may become unavailable as time passes. 

AnyFrontPage
  Bytes
 
 

**>>NOTEs FROM TINA<<**

* Please watch out for some url wraps, if a link appears
dead select the whole link and copy and paste to the
address bar in your browser. To read the Ezine to best
effect open the email to maximum.

--------------------------------------
AccessFP Bytes - The Bit in the middle!
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/AnyFrontPageBytes
Designing and crafting with FrontPage
Issue 21, Volume 2, 30th April 2001!
Sent to 343 Subscribers.
--------------------------------------

Editor: Tina Clarke,

--------------------------------------

Dear Reader you are receiving this Ezine because you subscribed to it. If you would like to remove yourself from AccessFP Bytes, please see SUBSCRIPTION MANAGEMENT
at the bottom of the Ezine. Using the "Reply" function will not
unsubscribe you! 

Our subscriber list is NOT made available to other companies or individuals. We value every subscriber and respect your privacy.

--------------------------------------

FREE available with your subscription is the E-book

"FrontPage Newbie Secrets" 

Most people new to FrontPage ask the questions contained in this E-Book, however if you are new to FrontPage and have a question that is not available in "FrontPage Newbie Secrets. Write and tell me  what it is, and it may just find it's way into a second edition. Not only that, I will credit you with asking the question, complete with your site address.

So read the E-Book, start crafting your site and see if you can come up with that burning question. <s>

***HAPPY FRONTPAGE CRAFTING***

Also available FREE is the monthly updated E-book
"Microsoft FrontPage Bulletin Archives"

++++ How do I get my FREE E-Books? ++++

To obtain your FREE E-books access the below url.

http://accessfp.net/ebooks/ 

Once you have downloaded an e-book to the folder of your choice on your hard drive, insert the password that was sent to you in your welcome message when you first signed up. Or you can find it in the archives at the yahoo interface.

If you are reading this Ezine because it was forwarded to you and you want the E-Books all you have to do is subscribe. For details see SUBSCRIPTION MANAGEMENT. Enjoy.

================================
IN THIS ISSUE
================================

~~~~~~~~~~~~Easter Special OFFER~~~~~~~~~~~~

30th April is the LAST DAY for new subcribers tell a friend.

From Sat 7th April, all NEW subscribers to the AccessFP Ezine will be automatically entered into a drawing for a FREE 7-Point Website Analysis by http://pointafter.com  ($49 value). The drawing will be held on May 1st and the winner will be notified within 24 hours, and featured in the Ezine the following week.

~~~~~~~~~~~~Easter Special OFFER~~~~~~~~~~~~

~~~~~~~~~~~~Special OFFER~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

AccessFP is pleased to announce that PageTools Version 1.01 a NEW FrontPage Add-on by Alex Tushinsky of www.ltmod.com will be extending his offer and this will now be a permanent special offer from the AccessFP Ezine and site.

You can download a free, 14 day trial version of PageTools from ZDNet, www.ltmod.com, and www.simtel.net. If you decide to keep the program, you can purchase it online at www.ltmod.com for $18.71 (25% off the regular $24.95 price).

IMPORTANT:
Mention the promo code: ACCESSFP to receive your discount.
 
ZDNet Link: http://www.zdnet.com/downloads/stories/info/0,,001GX5,.html 
LTMOD.COM Link: http://www.ltmod.com/dnloadPT.asp 

~~~~~~~~~~~~Special OFFER~~~~~~~~~~~~

1. Welcome from Tina
2 Generally Speaking 
3. Wassup @ AccessFP List
4. Guest Article or Tip - "Typography is Alive and Well on the Web"
5. Sponsors 
6. Featured Site of the week
7. Weekly Links and Resources
8. Subscription Management
9. Contact Information

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Did you know that AccessFP Ezine has a site and list to go with it? No well-dressed Ezine would be seen without them not to mention the AnyFrontPage Forums.

Site - http://www.accessfp.net/
List - http://groups.yahoo.com/group/AccessFPList
Forums - http://anyfrontpage.com/
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

--------------------------------------
1. WELCOME FROM TINA
--------------------------------------

Welcome to "AnyFrontPage Bytes - The Bit in the middle". These weekly issues are the Lite version of AccessFP Ezine containing snippets of news, links and resources.

My aim with this Lite version is to bring you FrontPage goodies, links and news that you can't do without each week. If you have any feedback, suggestions, gripes or compliments, please let me know I really would like your feedback about the ezine's, what do you think of the content? The layout? Do you want more of something or something else included; I need your feedback to find out.

======================================

This weeks article consists of "Typography is Alive and Well on the Web" by Peter De Pradines.

Tina Clarke


This FREE publication by AccessFP Bytes is sent ONLY to people who have requested it. Helping YOU out there! Since 6th November 2000.

-------------------------------------
2 GENERALLY SPEAKING 
-------------------------------------

UPDATES:
+++++++
http://www.jimcoaddins.com/?accessfp.net 
Jimco Add-ins has just released CodePack 2000, an extensible package of code samples. You choose which samples you want to install. You can also easily add and remove code samples at any time.

Jimco will also release additional code samples from time to time. These will be available as patches (or add-on packs) to CodePack 2000.

Other News from Jimco:
FrontPage 2002 will be available soon! Jimco is busy developing the first add-ins available for FrontPage 2002. Anticipated date of release is around the same time that Office XP will be available.

Jimco Add-ins is also pleased to announce the release of GoldPack 2000, my first add-in package for FrontPage 2000.

GoldPack 2000 contains all of my most popular add-ins. I have fixed a few program errors that were reported to me, and I have added a couple of enhancements that were requested. 

The new add-in package removes the reliance on the Jimco Support add-in and implements the menu system using accelerator keys for easy access to your favourite add-ins. As time permits, I will be releasing service releases to GoldPack that will add more add-ins and correct any remaining problems that have been reported. 

Also look for GoldPack 2002, a collection of add-ins for FrontPage 2000, and CodePack 2002 for FrontPage 2002.

There are still a lot of things in the works at Jimco Add-ins! And don't
forget, everything Jimco produces will always be free of charge! 
http://www.jimcoaddins.com/?accessfp.net 
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Web Presence Developer Program for Microsoft® FrontPage®: 
http://wpd.microsoftfrontpage.com/wpd/overview.asp 
Web Presence Developers (WPDs) for Microsoft FrontPage are professionals who are registered with Microsoft and can provide users of Microsoft Office and FrontPage with development services to complete their FrontPage-based Web sites. Upon completion of a successful collaborative effort between WPD and customer, the customer will take over updating and maintenance of their Web site using FrontPage. If you are a Web Presence development resource and successfully complete the WPD registration process you will: 

Be included in the FrontPage WPD referral list- a heavily-trafficked Microsoft Web site frequently visited by FrontPage customers seeking assistance in developing their Web site. 
Receive timely information regarding the Web Presence Developer for FrontPage program and other special offers. 
Receive press release guidelines and support to announce your support for FrontPage-based Webs. 

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

DID YOU KNOW THAT?
++++++++++++++++++
You may need to spell check a page in another language how do you do that?

Right click on a page and select Page Properties
Go to the Language tab and select the language of your choice from the 'Mark Current Document As' dropdown list. This informs FP which language you have selected for example German.

Now when you spell check by Tools | Spelling FP will then prompt you to install the German proofing tools. For this you will need your CD, once this has been installed it will spell check the document against the German dictionary. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Most times themes are contained in a zip file when you download them. Here is what you need to do once you download the file:

1. Open the zip file

2. Unzip all the files (using a program such as Winzip, which can be found at http://www.winzip.com  )

Note: unzip each theme to a separate folder and make sure that the name of the folder is the name of the .elm file below are the two paths for fp98 and fp2k.

FrontPage 98 - 

C:\Program Files\Microsoft Front Page\Themes\*\

FrontPage 2000 -

C:\Program Files\Common Files\Microsoft Shared\Themes\*\

*(Insert name of folder for theme here)

3. Open Microsoft FrontPage

4. For FrontPage 98 - Apply the theme by going to the themes view and selecting it.

For FrontPage 2000 - Apply the theme by going to the Format menu and selecting 'Theme'.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
If, for any reason, you need to change the name of a file 
or folder on your Web site, FrontPage will automatically 
update all the file's associated hyperlinks. You can rename 
a file in several ways, but it's easiest to follow these 
steps:

1. In the Folders, All Files, or Navigation View, 
click the filename to select it and then right click and choose 'rename'

A box appears around the filename, and the filename is 
highlighted.

2. Type a new name.

Make sure to keep the same three-letter extension so that 
the Explorer knows what kind of file you're renaming, though you can change this as well make sure it is one that FrontPage supports.

3. Click away from the box 

If the file contains associated links, the Rename dialog 
box appears, asking if you'd like to update the links to 
reflect the new name.

4. Click Yes.

The dialog box will close and FrontPage automatically updates the links.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Anyone looking for an earlier version of PWS can find it at:
ftp://g-lea.tamu.edu/Webserver.95/PWS10A.EXE 

If you can't access it directly then use the following steps:

1. In your browser enter ftp://g-lea.tamu.edu
2. click the "Webserver.95" folder
3. click the "PWS10A.EXE" file to download

Source: Rythmist of :-
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/pws-list 

------------------------------------
3 Wassup @ AccessFP List
------------------------------------

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/AccessFPList 
Wassup at the AccessFP List? Find out every week here or join at the link above and find out for yourself.

Linda wants to tell us 
"The website I am writing an ebook for is looking for an author for a book on how to earn a living buying/selling domain names....I'm not sure if any of you in here do this or know someone who does, but if you are interested in doing this, here's the site for you to apply for the job:

http://www.dreamjobstogo.com/contact.html  good luck Tell them Linda Johnson sent you in reply to the request from Michael Werner concerning a need for this type of author."

More next week from our motley 'crew' at the AccessFP List
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/AccessFPList 

------------------------------------
4 Guest Article - "Typography is Alive and Well on the Web"
------------------------------------

AccessFP is honoured to present the first in a series of articles by the renowned writer Peter De Pradines
________________________________________

Whilst flicking through a computer magazine the other 
morning I nearly suffered a very nasty accident. 

Just out of bed, I went to retrieve the mail and magazines 
from the mailbox. Placidly ambling back to breakfast when 
suddenly a freebie CD-ROM slides surreptitiously and 
silently out of the back pages of a computer magazine, 
slicing through the air like a Frisbee - guillotine, clearly 
intent on trimming my naked toenails on its way to the 
floor.

In the excitement I nearly fell over the cat, which was 
probably what saved me, my toenails and various other 
essential items! As a 'result' I suppose I couldn't 
complain although the cat was none too pleased as she 
stalked off in disgust. Picking up the offending offensive 
weapon - artfully disguised as a CD - I was about to commit 
it to the recycle bin - but I couldn't resist just peeking 
at this week's latest list of goodies. You know the ones - 
those that without which, I could not possibly continue my 
life. 

And, sure enough, there they were! Over 1,500 free fonts! 
The words blazed across this week's seductive circular 
offering - truly amazing! 

Now - I ask you - who in their right mind could possibly 
want more than a few dozen or so in the whole of their 
writing life? Surely Shakespeare 'did his bit' without 
1,500 different types quill? And there are few of us who 
will even approach his standard. No, such unhealthy excess 
of letter shapes seems almost bad for you and plainly 
showed how such an over abundance had reduced their value 
to CD fillers and give-aways. 

Over coffee, whilst seeking an armistice with the cat, I 
pondered further on this dreadful font glut afflicting an 
unsuspecting world. When you really thought about it, the 
situation was far worse that it originally seemed. With so 
many people and so much data being exchanged these days 
entirely through browsers and over the Internet the 
situation seemed even more absurd. 

Short of resorting to hi-tech font downloads, further 
delaying the 'good stuff' arriving on one's monitor, most 
people could only reliably employ about four different 
fonts types anyway. Granted - these were also different 
depending which browser and operating system the person was 
using, but even so, allowing three different fonts in each 
of the four types (no pun intended!) we are still only 
giving meaningful work to a dozen out of the 1,500 
available on this free CD. There are few politicians who 
could survive that sort of unemployment figures!

No doubt in the not too distant future things will change - 
they always do. We will be able to delight (or overwhelm) 
our audiences with fonts and styles that would challenge an 
entire subway of graffiti. Yet today on the Web, most of 
the time, we have but our basic dozen - only four of which 
will show up on any given system without a lot of technical 
jiggery-pokery. 

Do not let this ruin your day. Much can be done with just 
these four - mixing sizes and colors, both of the text 
itself and the background. Since my lower digits and other 
appendages remain unharmed by airborne malignant CD 
Frisbees, my main concern today is not with the wide 
variety of type styles but rather the basic underlying 
rules of typography.

In some aspects these relate to fonts themselves but only 
in a minor way. There are several other important aspects, 
all of which may be summarized as follows:

Contrast: This must be used to prevent various elements 
(paragraphs, headings, sub- headings) of a page merely being 
similar - irrespective of whether they actually belong 
together. If each of these elements is doing a different 
job then they should be different - very different - don't
be timid! Good contrast can often be found to be the most 
important visual attraction on a page.

Repetition: Bullets in a list, large initial letters in 
paragraphs (or drop caps) are common examples of 
repetition. Perhaps we rarely consider them deeply but they 
are really quite significant. Repetition can be usefully 
extended to color, shape, texture, spatial relationships, 
line thickness, sizes etc. This all helps develop 
organization and strengthen the unity of our pages.

Alignment: Absolutely nothing should ever be placed on a 
page just anywhere! Would you expect a meal on a plate, 
clothes on a body, features on a face or even flowers in a 
garden to look good if they were distributed in such a 
willy-nilly manner? Of course you wouldn't - and such 
practices on a page are equally foolish. This is why we 
covered the methods of controlling layout in my recent 
article on HTML tables. Every element should have some 
visual connection with another element on the page. This 
creates a clean sophisticated fresh look. And if you 
presume to be professional - this is what you're aiming at.

Proximity: Items relating to each other should be grouped 
close together. Seems rather obvious really doesn't it? But 
you would be amazed how many people miss this point. When 
several items are in close proximity they become one visual 
unit rather than separate units. This helps organize 
information and reduces clutter.

Hmm, .. pause for thought and reflection.

The more observant amongst you may well notice these prime 
elements - Contrast, Repetition, Alignment and Proximity - 
form an unfortunate but very memorable acronym - be that as 
it may, you now have little excuse for not recalling them 
any time you need to do so! Which I would boldly suggest to 
you should be often. Typography and layout is a very subtle 
art. Nearly always we can say that we either do or do not 
like the layout of a page. Much less frequently are we able 
to say exactly - and precisely - why we feel that way. 

This is important. 

We need to know just what subtle influences are affecting 
our eye and our judgement - and if possible, harness them - 
employ them to the improvement of our web pages. Let's take 
a closer look at our four elements.

Contrast:
--------- 
The trick with contrast is NOT to mess about - emphasise the 
difference - distinguish elements with a bang! 

Web-wise you are mostly dependant on size and color. If the 
size is to be different - make them very different. If it's 
colors - then don't try to contrast pastel shades - use 
primary colors. The effects can be striking. 

Here's a little side-tip here: Make good use of the &nbsp; 
the non-breaking space entity, to spread out letter with 
more than the usual single space. Most browsers support 
this these days.

Repetition:
-----------
Headings, sub-headings and body text should all be different 
sizes and/or colors. But please, please make sure, once you 
decide on a format for an element, that you ensure that it 
remains the same throughout. All main headings should be the 
same color and size - all - subs the same color and size and 
so on. This should follow right the way throughout that page 
(at least!) or the whole domain if appropriate.

Bullets and indents are naturals for repetition and most 
people use these without a second thought. Ensure that you 
stick to the same bullets and the same amount of indentation 
in order to gain the strength and organisation that 
repetition brings to you written work.

Alignment:
---------- 
We all know that things look tidier in straight lines. 

Without the ability to fully justify body text in browsers 
you have a decision to make - left justify or right justify? 
Left is classic - and sometime boring - it depends on the 
tone of your page. Perhaps you want to grab the reader's 
eye? Well you're not liable to do that with boring old left 
justification - slide things over to the right for a change. 
Follow the same line with the headings and subs and you 
begin to make a strong 'statement' - you grasp your reader's 
attention instead of allowing them to snooze, click and pass 
you by.

Consistent indents always provide good alignment. The eye 
picks these points out subconsciously - you don't actually 
note the lines unless you are watching out for them - but 
you mind is picking them up all the time. It enjoys this 
order, reading becomes easier and your visitor is able to 
concentrate on the message your words carry - not spending 
their time just trying to make some sort of order out of 
the page.

When items are aligned on a page, it creates a strong 
cohesive unit. Even when elements are physically separated, 
if they are aligned there is an invisible line that 
connects them, in the reader's mind and in their eye. 

Without alignment your pages will look like a normal, 
healthy teenager's bedroom on a bad day! If you would 
prefer to avoid this always find something else on a page 
to align with even if the two elements are physically far 
away from each other.

Never mix alignments on a page - unless you have a very, 
very good reason! If you are left, stick to the left and 
the same with the right. 

What's that you say? 

What about placing things in the center of a page? Hmmm, 
well I'm not a big fan of centering things - you end up 
with a ragged edge down both sides. Putting text smack in 
the middle can be untidy, insipid and more of a 'cop-out' 
than anything else. Don't be a wimp - decide which side 
you're on and stick to it. Your readers will thank you for 
it!

Proximity:
---------- 
Group related items together. Would you consider mixing cats 
and dogs that don't know each other? How about mixing your 
sugar with the salt in the kitchen - after all they're the 
same color and very similar really? Of course, this is 
ridiculous and yet people will spatter related items around 
there pages as though they had used an out of control 
automatic weapon instead of a keyboard. Equally they will 
shuffle quite unrelated elements into a splendid 'mess' 
which happily flows everywhere like a lava flow - but not so 
pretty!

Well - there you go - that's a brief run through the main 
points. Typography goes a lot deeper than this of course. Like 
anything else - the more you learn, the better you get at 
it.

My purpose here has been to awaken your mind to the fact 
that typography exists! And that it is alive and well on 
the Web - even without the current ability to use hundreds 
of fonts easily. 

Oh yes, another important tip before I go - ensure you wear 
your steel toe-capped bedroom-slippers when you pick up the 
post in the morning! Have a good day.

Peter de Pradines
... providing serious steak along with the sizzle!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Peter de Pradines: Web site design consultant - online author
Graduate in Computer Science with 30 years hands-on experience
Peter lectures in Europe and holds winter workshops for small
groups in the very beautiful Mediterranean island of Mallorca
Specializing in web design and copywriting he may be contacted
at: mailto:Peter@dePradines.com  or mailto:pdp@weedmail.com 
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

------------------------------------
5 Sponsors
------------------------------------

~~~~~~~~~~~~Special OFFER~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
http://newbieclub.com/wordmagic/?accessfp 
Do you just 'muddle through and make do' with the basic
features of Microsoft Word? What a sad waste of such a remarkable program! The Newbie Club have joined forces with AccessFP List's very own Linda Johnson who is a professional 'Word' personal tutor, to produce the first in a series of stunning ebooklets called MS Word MAGIC! You've never seen 'Word' taught in such an enjoyable and informative way before. And you'll learn things you thought could only be achieved by the professionals! Read about it here: http://newbieclub.com/wordmagic/?accessfp 
Heck, it's ONLY $9.95!

~~~~~~~~~~~~Special OFFER~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Suite 3
http://www.accessfp.net/jbotsca.htm 
Suite 3 is J-Bots Plus 2000, Meta Tag Maker 2000, and Calendar Wizard 2000 bundled into one money-saving
package. Suite 3 sells for $109.85 - a $15 savings over
purchasing these three add-ins separately!
Total value $124.85 BUY Now for only $109.85

~~~~~~~~~~~~Special OFFER~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 

-------------------------------------
6 FEATURED SITE OF THE WEEK
------------------------------------

If you know of a site that is worthy of being featured in AccessFP Bytes submit it today at:

Featuredbytes@accessfp.net
 

You must include the name, url and a description about the site and why you think it's a good resource to have. Along with your recommendation should be YOUR name and site url.

If your recommended site is featured it goes into a draw for in three months time and the winner will receive a TOP ad space in the monthly AccessFP Ezine.

Featured Site------- Eye Candyv3 (FREE AT THE MOMENT)

http://www.critical-depth.com/eyecandy_download.asp 
This weeks featured site is something special and if you have not heard about the FREE download of Eye Candyv3 you had better scoot over there NOW even when you recive this the offer may be over I hope not because this plug-in for Photoshop and Paintshop Pro also sometimes works with Image Composer (FrontPage Image Editor) I could not get it to work with mine but it works with my PSv5.
Here's you opportunity to get Eye Candy, one of the most popular
Photoshop filter sets, for free. Simply download this free version of
Eye Candy 3.0.
This special edition contains 21 fully functional filters that will help
you create stunning effects in seconds. View your work in an advanced
preview that zooms, resizes, and gives you instant access to any part of the original image. Save and restore your settings for each filter or
use one of over 200 presets for quality effects with minimal clicks. In
addition, Eye Candy's filters take full advantage of Photoshop's Actions
feature.
This special edition of Eye Candy 3 does not time out. It does,
however, entitle you to a special discount on the award-winning Eye
Candy 4000.
http://www.critical-depth.com/eyecandy_download.asp 
Please Remember: They have the amount of connections limited to 25 at a time. No pushing... No Shoving. If you get an error of ANY kind then come back to the above page and try again. If you get prompted for a user name and password then come back to this page and try again. 

***Don't forget to write to the author (Eric) and thank him for his generous offer.

-------------------------------------
7 WEEKLY LINKS AND RESOURCES
-------------------------------------

****General Links**** 

Reference Library
http://pages.prodigy.net/guide/index.html 
This section on the prodigy site has a reference library stuffed full of information that helps craft your site I would check it out. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Recently I published an article on 404's not found (Issue 19) and I'd like to bring your attention to this page at willmaster http://willmaster.com/master/404/  here you can download a FREE easy to maintain CGI program written with Perl 5 for managing your "404 -- URL not found" website visitor mistakes. The current version of Master 404 is for Unix servers. It has not been tested on Linux. It requires either an .htaccess file in your home directory which redirects 404s to Master404.cgi or your ISP must update the server .conf files to do the same thing. Usually, the .htaccess method is less bothersome.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

****FrontPage Links**** 

NOTE: New links appear here in AccessFP Bytes FIRST. Only after a week will they appear on the site. Get ahead of the game Today!

Collect Data on the Web More Easily with FrontPage 2000
http://news.microsoft.co.uk/ins040112940 
This article shows you how to collect important data from your Web site visitors and send the results to a database, text file, or e-mail address. You can then query and view the most up-to-date information entered by your Web site guests-such as contact information or site feedback-in a customisable Web page.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
FrontPage 2000 for Windows Frequently Asked Questions
http://support.microsoft.com/support/frontpage/fp2000/fp2kfaq 
ASP
Table of Contents
Editing Web Content 
Publishing Your Web 
Upgrade Questions 
Working with Databases
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Download the 100 Free themes from 
http://www.frontpageguru.com/fpthemedownload.html 
Not only are there 100 free themes. There is also a gurumaster installer and help pages on themes, what more could you want?

---------------------------------------------------
For our 'Spotlight on FrontPage', this week AccessFP Focuses on Database links.
http://www.sitebuilder.ws/frontpage/tutorials/add_db.htm 
http://businesssoft.about.com/compute/businesssoft/library/blfiltera.htm
http://support.microsoft.com/support/frontpage/fp2000/rc/datarc.asp
http://frontpagehowto.com/ 
http://adefwebserver.com/FrontPage/Microsoft.htm 
http://www.members.home.net/lenx/objectconvertermain.htm

------------------------------------
8 SUBSCRIPTION MANAGEMENT
------------------------------------- 

To SUBSCRIBE to this Newsletter:
AnyFrontPageBytes-subscribe@yahoogroups.com
To UNSUBSCRIBE from this Newsletter:
AnyFrontPageBytes-unsubscribe@yahoogroups.com
Send a blank email with no subject line.

This FREE publication by AccessFP Bytes is sent ONLY to people who have requested it. Helping FrontPage Crafter's Since 6th November 2000.

Note: Our subscriber list is NOT made available to other companies. We value every subscriber and respect your privacy.

Do you know anyone who might be interested in receiving this Ezine? Please recommend it to them! If you are reading someone else's copy and you like what we offer, please subscribe! It is easy and free: As a bonus for your kind support you could WIN $10,000 plus a Palm V Organizer.

-------------------------------------
9 CONTACT INFORMATION
-------------------------------------

Routine Disclaimer: Although I make an effort to check out every advertisement and link. I cannot assume responsibility for the actions of my advertisers, or the availability of links. You use the information provided at your own risk, it is always wise to back up your data before editing.

Please help promote AccessFP Bytes by linking to our site. Instructions on how to link can be found at 
http://www.accessfp.net/linkinfo.htm

Thank you for reading "AccessFP Bytes - The Bit in the Middle - Designing and crafting with FrontPage"

Copyright 2000 - 2001 AccessFP Bytes - The Bit in the Middle. AccessFP Bytes may only be redistributed in its unedited form. Written permission from the editor must be obtained to reprint or cite the information contained within this newsletter.

Please feel free to forward this newsletter to any of your associates who might benefit from this information.

If you are receiving this issue as a forward, and would like to get your own free subscription, please see subscription management above. When you subscribe you will be eligible to receive three FREE E-books, "FrontPage Newbie Secrets" and "Microsoft FrontPage Bulletin Archives" 1999 -2000 and 20001. (See above for details) as well as being able to access the archived AccessFP Ezine's.

For the FAQ's and Article/Tip submission guidelines about "AccessFP Bytes" see: 
http://www.accessfp.net/accessfpezine.htm
Thank you! I'm looking forward to publish your excellent work in "AccessFP Bytes - The Bit in the Middle" soon. 

Tina Clarke
<a href="http://www.accessfp.net/">AccessFP - FrontPage Resource Centre</a>