HTML5 | Dreamweaver Tutorials | Setting Up The Website

The Site: movies-to-watch.net Playlist [not created yet..] Hey guys! This is the second video in the Create a Website Series/Project. Today we are going to be setting up our folders and then hoping into Dreamweaver CS5 to start the HTML5 coding. I’m going at a beginner pace to begin with so I’m sorry if thats frustrating for some. We begin with the standard tags html, head and body. html tag: This tells the browser what language we speak, and everything in the website is wrapped inside it. head tag: This tells the browser information about the website that the visitor wouldn’t see ie. Where the stylesheet is. body tag : All our content is in here ie. What a user will see. What’s in this website series? – HTML5 coding tutorials – CSS3 coding tutorials – Graphic creation in Photoshop – Picking the best webhost – Uploading to a server – Creating email accounts etc – SEO [Search Engine Optimization] All of the coding will be done in Adobe Dreamweaver CS5, but you do not need this version or any paid software to follow along. It will be coded by hand. ie. Dreamweaver CS4, Dreamweaver CS3, Notepad, Notepad++ etc will all work. There are many parts to this series so you can follow along on each step. ★ Twitter: twitter.com ★ Google+: gplus.to/ZeTutorials ★ FaceBook: facebook.com ★ Subscribe: bit.ly —— Dreamweaver CS5 Tutorial Series Setting up a website Starting a website for beginners dreamweaver cs5 tutorial for beginners HTML5 tutorials Graphic design ZeTutorials

DragonBall Online Official Cinematic Opening [720p HD]

The Official Brand New Dragon Ball Online Cinematic Opening/Introduction In High Definition, This Opening Is For The New Dragon Ball Online Patch Version 1.0, Enjoy! GO HERE FOR THE DOWNLOAD: dbmmo.com The Parodies and videos are protected by the fair use clause of the US Copyright act 1976 which allows material to be used in forms of documentaries, criticisms, parody/satires and education. Section 106 granted five exclusive rights to copyright holders: 1. the right to reproduce (copy), 2. the right to create derivative works of the original work, 3. the right to sell, lease, or rent copies of the work to the public, 4. the right to perform the work publicly (if the work is a literary, musical, dramatic, choreographic, pantomime, motion picture, or other audiovisual work), and 5. the right to display the work publicly (if the work is a literary, musical, dramatic, choreographic, pantomime, pictorial, graphic, sculptural, motion picture, or other audiovisual work).