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Posted by Chaddy2222 on 08/15/07 12:35
On Aug 15, 9:57 pm, Andy Dingley <ding...@codesmiths.com> wrote:
> On 15 Aug, 12:04, Chaddy2222 <spamlovermailbox-sicur...@yahoo.com.au>
> wrote:
>
> > Yes, but in contrast, people who work on their own cars at home will
> > more then not go and find out WTF they need to do (what's involved)
> > before building something.
>
> Yes, but who still works on their cars at home? Cars don't go wrong
> these days (compared to the recent past) so the "DIY cost-saving"
> aspect has dwindled. If it does go wrong, it has probably surprised
> you by spitting the exhaust out the day before you meant to go on
> holiday, so you throw it at the garage in a hurry and console yourself
> that it no longer happens very often.
>
This is true, + most moddern cars are running off a computer so you
need an expert to re-tune and fix the dam thing anyway.
> If you are working on a car at home, chances are that it's 20+ years
> old, an interesting "classic", not your main car, and you're doing it
> because you _want_ to work on it as a hobby, not because you need a
> car and you want to save money.
>
This is also true.
> HTML has moved in the same way. If you just want an on-line diary or
> photo gallery, sign up with a blog service. If you want a business web
> site, the costs are now cheap and predictable (compared to last
> century), so employ someone to do it for you quickly, competently and
> cheaply. If you're hacking on raw HTML these days, it's either a job
> or an interest in HTML itself.
Yep, this is also the case, + you can download plenty of free CMS
packages that are easy to set-up and then you've got a website in a
box.
--
Regards Chad. http://freewebdesign.awardspace.biz
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