Site builders

What? You don’t have a Web site yet? Well, spin your own.

Two new Web site creation services caught our attention and we particularly liked the aptly named Spin Site, which gives you all the tools for a professional site plus hosting.

An initial fee of US$49 provides three months of

free Web hosting, and if you want to continue after that, the charge is $13 a month. There is no software to download; everything is handled online.

Site plans are presented as themes and you can place text and graphics wherever you want. You can paste in pages from Microsoft Word or from an old Web site. We found changing colors and layouts to be fast and easy, and the changes were automatically carried out through all pages of the site.

If you don’t want to plunk down the US$49 right away, you can create sample sites that are then put up on the Web for a week or so at no charge.

A more expensive option is available for a US$99 initial fee and US$35 a month. With this you can create security levels for your Web site so some parts are available only to users who have a password. You can also assign editing rights to some password holders.

For users who would like to set up their own store, there is a shopping cart and checkout feature that is linked with PayPal, the nearly universal online payment service. The stores can have customer inquiry forms and you can collect statistics on visitor use and preferences. If someone turns out to be a regular nuisance, you can block that person from visiting the site.

All sites created with Spin Site have a built-in search function — an absolute must for online stores. All changes to the site are made in real time, but do not take effect until you click “”publish.”” For more information, check out www.spinsite.com.

OTHER HOSTS

Here are two other Web services that allow you to create Web sites and online stores:

The most important is Yahoo.com, which we have written about before and is excellent. Its software uses templates and is absolutely free. Basic Web hosting is only $12 a month. If you look at a list of corporate users it’s like a who’s who of American business. Check it out at: http://smallbusiness.yahoo.com.

We also looked at a service called CoffeeCup (www.coffeecup.com). We liked it, but the number of negative comments from users made us cautious about recommending it strongly. You can read these comments at cnet.com.

One of the things we always wonder about when viewing comments is how many are from independent users and how many from employees of the featured company or rival companies. Such skulduggery has become common. Anyway, we liked it; the hosting fee is $10 a month and the software is free.

THE AMIGA LIVES! SORT OF

An Italian software house has developed Amiga Forever, an Amiga emulator for Windows computers.

Aficionados still fondly remember the Commodore Amiga, which was the most advanced graphics and music computer of its day. Unfortunately, its day was 20 years ago. Still, this was one of the great ones.

The Amiga was the world’s first truly multimedia personal computer. A significant advantage was that it was TV-compatible and could be used directly to edit video footage and produce graphics and sound that were broadcast quality. Amigas were used to create the opening scenes of the popular sci-fi show “”Babylon 5,”” for example.

Amiga Forever 6.0 is available for $30 as a download from www.amigaforever.com, Web site for Cloanto, or $60 for a CD. The software includes an Amiga Web browser, original games, an art gallery and graphics editors. Thousands of Amiga games are available for downloading from other sites. The Amiga has a sizable fan base in Europe.

INTERNUTS

Remember the ebook? Well this site (www.ebookdirectory.com) hasn’t. A list of books that can be downloaded from the Web for free.

Free college textbooks? You got to be kidding. Well at www.lightandmatter.com they are not kidding. Kind of a subset of the free ebooks, but these are just for science. You can download free college textbooks in physics from a professor at Fullerton College in California. The free books have already been adopted by 10 other colleges and eight high schools. The site also has a download for finding the location of planets.

Do-it-yourselfers beware of www.poormanspubs.us. This is a commercial site aimed at the do-it-yourself handyman. What’s interesting about it are the instructions and materials for building power and metal-working tools, air conditioners, steam engines, small bridges, etc., from basic parts and for little money.

BOOKS

Number three in “”The Big Book of Logos”” by David Carter; $30 from Harper Design (www.harpercollins.com).

This is a great book for gathering ideas for your own company logo or letterheads. There are thousands of logos here and they can all be scanned and modified in your computer. Doing that is a little touchy because many of the logos are copyrighted, but if you use the scan just as a starting point you ought to be able to make something sufficiently different to pass scrutiny. A book, a bucking bronco or a building are designs that could go with many subjects, for example.

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Jim Love, Chief Content Officer, IT World Canada

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