I've had a similar task once and we used HTML Transit, a software by Stellent (http://www.stellent.com/) and distributed by Avantstar (http://www.avantstar.com/). You can define templates for all kinds of word styles and fine-tweak the HTML output quite neatly.
And, another advantage, I had excellent support when some questions arose.
Well, to put it a simple way, wireless networks basically use radio waves for transmission, each standard has a band of frequencies, which are used for FDMA (Frequency Division Multiple Access, saying multiple nodes access the same 'connection' using different frequencies). Can you choose which connection you want/ Well, there's a radio station sending on a frequency, now there's another radio station sending on the same frequency, but with a ten times stronger antenna. This is pretty much how much you can choose here... W-LAN interfaces are supposed to choose the strongest signal, which usually makes sense.
With 802.11 you have a SSID associated with an infrastructure-based network (i.e. one that is based on fixed access points, not only on connections between nomadic nodes). This could be a way of separating the log-ons, but the interference will still be there since it's still radio transmission. So, if worst comes to worst, you might look only for the free net access points to log on to, but the Starbucks access point just send such a string signal that you just can't hear the free ones in all that commercial noise...
HTH,
RaSchi
I've had a similar task once and we used HTML Transit, a software by Stellent (http://www.stellent.com/) and distributed by Avantstar (http://www.avantstar.com/). You can define templates for all kinds of word styles and fine-tweak the HTML output quite neatly. And, another advantage, I had excellent support when some questions arose.
Well, to put it a simple way, wireless networks basically use radio waves for transmission, each standard has a band of frequencies, which are used for FDMA (Frequency Division Multiple Access, saying multiple nodes access the same 'connection' using different frequencies). Can you choose which connection you want/ Well, there's a radio station sending on a frequency, now there's another radio station sending on the same frequency, but with a ten times stronger antenna. This is pretty much how much you can choose here... W-LAN interfaces are supposed to choose the strongest signal, which usually makes sense. With 802.11 you have a SSID associated with an infrastructure-based network (i.e. one that is based on fixed access points, not only on connections between nomadic nodes). This could be a way of separating the log-ons, but the interference will still be there since it's still radio transmission. So, if worst comes to worst, you might look only for the free net access points to log on to, but the Starbucks access point just send such a string signal that you just can't hear the free ones in all that commercial noise... HTH, RaSchi