He double-clicked the purple icon. The splash screen appeared: . It felt like a relic from a future that was already arriving. The "Fluid Grid Layouts" were there, promising to make his websites look good on those new things called iPhones.
You walk to a coffee shop. You use their loaner PC. You plug in your flash drive, extract the Portable RAR in under two minutes, and launch Dreamweaver CS6. The splash screen appears—that iconic blue gradient. You toggle between (raw HTML/CSS) and Live View (WebKit preview). You fix a client’s broken table layout. You upload via built-in FTP. When you close the app, there is no evidence left on the host machine. He double-clicked the purple icon
Modern web design involves Gulp, Node, React, and 50,000 NPM packages. Dreamweaver CS6 offered a simple Split View: half-code, half-visual. For an entertainment blogger wanting to update a movie review site, this was perfect. You could style a <div> by dragging a corner in Design View, and the code wrote itself. The "Fluid Grid Layouts" were there, promising to