This is shown by the fact that there are hardly any customers who spend high 4-digit sums for a commercial website, but this has nothing to do with "stinginess is cool".ĭecisive for a commercial website is primarily no longer the design, Supply and demand regulate this, in bad as well as in good times.Īnd what the customer decides or wants, what the customer is willing to do, that the providers of web software have understood quite quickly, all of them who are active in this field.Īnd what exactly does the customer determine? Exactly: the price! Is becoming more and more irrelevant, because the customer now determines the rules of the game, How this is or was technically implemented is secondary, ![]() The possibilities to realize this stands and falls however always with theĭecisive is his creativity, his ability, his imagination. Of course, everyone is probably trying to equip a website with the best design so that it stands out from others, just represents something special. is concerned, the opinions are known to differ. I like this kind of exchange of opinions, you can give so nice his two cents.Īs far as design/layout etc. This kind of opinions, discussions,- are always interesting, no matter how someone thinks and acts. I'm not bashing Mobirise - I was just curious if anyone was using Site Designer, and if so, what their experience has been, or why they switched from Mobirise. I guess my point is, Site Designer is a "simple" designer too, but also has a ton of more advanced features if you need it - Mobirise does not have that. Again, for post-design coding, there are a ton of options (DW, HTML Editor, VS Code, Atom, - heck even Notepad++, etc.). Other products provide a lot more options and advanced features, often for similar prices to Mobirise - which is why I'm attracted to Site Designer, among all the other reasons mentioned.Īnd yes, it's a designer - not really meant for coding - so they do offer a separate editor, which I don't need since I use DW for that. Mobirise as a whole is a good product, but it's fairly basic - again, good for people who want "simple". But if you read my post - this is not my issue with Mobirise. ![]() I'd be interested to hear anyone's experience with a recent version of Site - yes! We are - yes, Mobirise and Site Designer have a similar purchasing methodology. I'm posting this just to see if anyone shares my opinion, and more importantly is using Site Designer (a recent version - the product wasn't that great years ago IMHO). I think Mobirise is a good product - but based on my specific needs it is lacking a bit. I used to use Webflow religiously, but they've become very expensive, I don't need their CMS, and their affordable plans limit the number of projects you can have. I never use DW for designing a site, but I do use it to change/update CSS, JS and PHP. While I'm a die-hard Adobe Dreamweaver user, I only use it post-design - to add PHP custom code as needed. If you have used Webflow or have some good experience, their interface isn't too bad - it can be a bit much if you don't have a coding background - but for me, it's pretty solid. ![]() It has templates, components, and good support. I'm thinking of switching back to it because it now supports so much - including CSS Frameworks like Bootstrap, Foundation & Materialize - or none at all (they call it "Frameworkless" - create your own from scratch). Because of this, I took a new look at Site Designer (by CoffeeCup) - it's been a long time since I used this product and it's come a looooong way. Also, Mobirise has pretty good exported code, but much of it is not needed (for instance, the exported code includes all the block code stuff that was turned off and is just hidden). ![]() Mobirise meets some of these requirements, but honestly, it's missing some simple things - one of the most basic is making design changes (like alignment) for each breakpoint - yes, you can do this by adding code into the media queries, but you should be able to do this in the UI in my opinion. I've used a ton of web builders in the past - Mobirise, Webflow, Wappler, Pinegrow, Blocks, Site Designer, etc.some of the things I desire in a builder are:ġ) no subscriptions, (I hate subscriptions)Ģ) exports clean code to use on my own servers (this is a must)ģ) ability to make design changes per breakpoint without codeĤ) ability to use/insert blocks/components to speed development
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