Quanta Gold Reviewed
An anonymous reader writes "Ever wondered how commercial Linux Web development environments stack up against
those for other OS's? There's a reivew at Digital-Web
of Quanta Gold, the commercial HTML editor from theKompany.com. I've always been a fan of Quanta Plus, but it's
interesting to see what the commercial application has (and doesn't have). The
full review
of Quanta Gold can be found here."
Isn't documentation supposed to be one of the big reasons people buy commercial vs. use noncommercial software?
Security is inversely proportional to the commitment of one desiring to circumvent it.
The reviewer doesn't know about kio_fish. (He might also be using an older version of KDE. Although it can be used with older versions if you install it yourself, kio_fish comes standard in KDE 3.1 and above.) It essentially does the scp/sftp thing automatically. Start Quanta, go to File -> Open and in the 'Location' box type something like 'fish://example.com/path/to/document/doc.txt'. Then when asked, enter your password for your account on example.com. You file will open just as if it's living on the filesystem of the machine you started Quanta from. You can open additional remote files, save remote files, open local files, whatever without having to worry about moving files between machines.
This works in any KDE app, too. Hit alt+F2 and enter 'fish://example.com'. You'll get a Konqueror window opened to your home directory on example.com. This is an incredibly handy feature of KDE. This basically settled the GNOME vs. KDE debate for me once I started uising it.
-B
Ash and Hickory, straight-grained and true, make excellent bludgeons, dandy for the cudgeling of vegetarians.