Really? I recall my personal roadkill website I had back in 1996 as a 6th grader. Picked up an HTML manual at the library when they still had card catalogs. Nothing too hard about it at all and Dreamweaver and Photoshop made it a snap if you were ignorant of markup.
It was a bubble. Too bad I was learning about Earth Science while people were making frivolous dollars.
DreamWeaver 1.0 wasn't released until December of '97 [1] and in November '96 Photoshop just released 4.0 [2], the first version with Layers, it still only had 1 undo, and text was rasterized (you couldn't edit it). FrontPage wasn't even released until around '96.
Most of the websites I remember from that period had a lot of cut and paste graphics (Photoshop was expensive, has a learning curve, and harder to use than today) so I'm sure custom graphics were expensive and people charged a high rate (with lower productivity). I can't remember any popular WYSIWYG authoring software prior to DreamWeaver/FrontPage. I would guess most were hand-written--which, as you know isn't hard, but the tools were a lot less refined and harder to find out about back then.
No, no it wasn't. HomeSite existed as a separate product well into the 2000s, although stagnant as all get-out as the competition trounced it: http://www.adobe.com/products/homesite/
I still remember owning Dreamweaver 1.0 and HomeSite simultaneously back in late '97.
I actually made money in the mid 90s making websites for people and I was born in 1989. I made websites for local teachers and the middle school. I had lots of walking around money as a kid in high school because I had a recurring payment from work that had begun in 2001 at the height of the dotcom era.
Really? I recall my personal roadkill website I had back in 1996 as a 6th grader. Picked up an HTML manual at the library when they still had card catalogs. Nothing too hard about it at all and Dreamweaver and Photoshop made it a snap if you were ignorant of markup.
It was a bubble. Too bad I was learning about Earth Science while people were making frivolous dollars.