![]() Your credit card will be charged separately for wine and liquor under "Parecell Wines LLC".Parcelle Wines LLC, and Baldor Transportation LLC are separate companies.Restocking charges of 15% of your order may also apply. If proper identification is not available at the time of delivery, your delivery will be refused and you will be charged a delivery attempt fee of $5.95.The person receiving the delivery must present proper age verification and will be required to sign. You must be 21 years of age to order wine or liquor.Purchases from Parcelle Wine are subject to the following terms and conditions: We are certain that you’ll find this collection to fit any occasion you may have. Our selection of wines are curated by Parcelle Wines in New York City. Maybe my use is just too out of the norm for RapidWeaver.Wine and Liquor - Provided by Parcelle Wine. I have a couple web sites for my hobbies, and run a site for a local British car club, so I could see using RapidWeaver as a tool to refresh those aging sites (one done around 2005 and the others in the late '90s.) But I was hoping to use it to create a fresh, modern look for my weather site. So if all of that is also manual, again, RapidWeaver doesn’t seem like it would help. I also don’t see a method to send some of the published pages to local folders (to be processed and populated by WeatherCat) and some to my hosting server. If all I’d be doing is copying my current raw HTML into a RapidWeaver HTML page, I’m not sure I see an advantage. I looked at source code for the weather pages. And LWC users get WC at half price (contact Stu directly on the Trixology forum.) It is far, far more feature rich than LWC was, including social media posting and sending data to several agencies. Thank you will find WeatherCat very familiar, as it is build by the same developer (Stuart Ball) as LWC was. Maybe I’ll upgrade to WeatherCat, dust off an old Mac and get my station reporting our beautiful Algarve weather to the world again Certainly enough to whet your appetite.įeel free to message me if you want more info. Having said that Will Woodgate produces a good number of ‘free’ themes and stacks that are probably enough to produce a high quality site. I certainly recommend the Stacks add-on and then you’ll want to purchase various 3rd party stacks. The only caveat using RW is that you can expect to pay a lot more than the basic price to add ‘add-ons’. It’s more basic than yours but you’ll get the idea: I’ve not had a site running for a couple of years but you’ve actually re-kindled the idea so I might have a play over the Christmas - Will Woodgate, who is a revered RW developer of themes and stacks, has a weather site running Trixology’s WeatherCat. Having got into RapidWeaver for my buisness site I produced a RW based weather site using first WeatherLink for Mac (that crashed a lot) and then Lightsoft Weather Center. I dabbled in a basic html site and used the Davis templates and WeatherLink (tried both Windows and Mac versions). I think I’ve attached an image of my file structure in Forklift. (It currently polls the software version and populates the HTML page. I think CSS can do this, but one line of the footer would have to go through the weather software to get populated, or else I’d need to change it with every software update. Some of the content goes directly to the server after editing HTML (I’m currently manually FTPing it using ForkLift), and others go to a local watched folder after HTML editing to be populated by the weather software and automatically FTP’d to the server.Ĭan RapidWeaver do this? I currently don’t have a header/footer, and each page’s menus are copy/pasted to each HTML page when I make changes. Much of this has been copy/pasted from various sources as well as templates from the weather software community. Pretty much a 1996 HTML 101 class level.įour years ago, I started building a much more complex weather-related site, with menus on each page, scripts, local templates filled by a weather application before publishing on the web, CSS, etc. I’ve been using PageSpinner for the past 16 years, and my pages have been pretty rudimentary, with very little scripting, CSS, etc. After a year of fighting PageMill, I switched to the then new Optima Systems PageSpinner, a raw HTML editor with a few templates and tools to plug into the page. What a horrible HTML tool that was! Didn’t follow any convention, and filled the page with garbage code. I’ve also watched the ScreenCastsOnline two-part tutorial, which makes using RapidWeaver pretty nice.Ī bit of history: I first started web publishing in 1995 using Adobe PageMill. I am previewing RapidWeaver 6 to purchase as part of the MacUpdate $55 bundle, and have a few questions.
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