Difference between revisions of "How to make a website"

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(Developer-hosted versus user-installed)
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==Developer-hosted versus user-installed==
 
==Developer-hosted versus user-installed==
The simplest way to make a website is to sign up for a free [[blog]] on a [[developer-hosted platform]]. The website software is operated by the developer for the benefit of the blog authors. It is very easy to create your own personal blog using a default format. If you want to configure your blog to a personal format, most of these platforms will let you do so, but you will generally have to know [[HyperText Markup Language|HTML]] and [[Cascading Style Sheets|CSS]]. So this "simple" solution can rapidly become quite complicated.
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The simplest way to make a website is to sign up for a free [[blog]] on a [[developer-hosted platform]]. The website software is operated by the developer for the benefit of the blog authors. It is very easy to create your own personal blog using a default format. If you want to configure your blog to a personal format, most of these platforms will let you do so, but you will generally have to know [[HTML]] and [[Cascading Style Sheets|CSS]]. So this "simple" solution can rapidly become quite complicated.
  
 
It is somewhat more difficult, but much more rewarding, to learn to install your own websites. This is generally done by using a [[web hosting service]], which provides space on a [[web server]] that they own (or lease) and run, as well as the Internet connectivity. A still more ambitious alternative is to rent your own web server from an [[internet hosting service]], which may be either an entire server rented from a [[dedicated hosting service]], or a [[virtual private server]] produced by partitioning a single server so that it appears as multiple servers, each with its own operating system and capable of being independently rebooted.
 
It is somewhat more difficult, but much more rewarding, to learn to install your own websites. This is generally done by using a [[web hosting service]], which provides space on a [[web server]] that they own (or lease) and run, as well as the Internet connectivity. A still more ambitious alternative is to rent your own web server from an [[internet hosting service]], which may be either an entire server rented from a [[dedicated hosting service]], or a [[virtual private server]] produced by partitioning a single server so that it appears as multiple servers, each with its own operating system and capable of being independently rebooted.

Revision as of 18:03, 7 January 2010