Welcome to the
BEHAVIORAL
NEUROSCIENCE LAB
2004
Home Page
Blackboard
Warning!!!!
DO NOT open
these framesets with Netscape and then save them without changing the
save as option to Web Page html Only. If you don't make this
change from the default, the files will be altered in a way you don't
want te deal with!!! In any browser, if you simply RIGHT click on
the link,
you can save it to your machine and then use some FTP software NOT
NETSCAPE to publish the file. Netscape is a great editor for
working on the files that the framesets load - don't be afraid of using
it - just don't use Netscape to edit/publish the frameset file.
Of course, you can safely simply browse and look at the frameset with
Netscape, or any browser. Looking at it won't change it.
Also - we ran into an odd Power Term problem yesterday in which it
wouldn't publish some jpg files without generating an odd error.
WSFTP published the files without a hitch. I suspect Netscape
would have worked equally well (assuming you have a newer version of
Netscape than the school provides).
Get this - WSFTP has been available on all University lab machines for
some time!! Even the Help Desk folks didn't know, but when I
complained about the above problem the "fix" I was offered was that I
should stop using Power Term! That'll fix it all right :)
Here is the first (freshly modified for larger images) Frameset
that you need! (You can just right click and save - click
here to
get WSFTP.)
Here's the second--much
like the first.
Important! You want your
visitors to be able to "escape" your frameset, so include a link to
one, or more, escape points, like your homepage. When you make
these links, include Target=_top as an Advanced option in your
link. Don't forget to include Target=image2 Advanced options in
all your links that are intended to put new images up in the
frameset. Don't forget that the frameset will be automatically
loading Image2a.html as the first image file. That might suggest
that subsequent files would have b, c, d, ... elements before ".html" -
just a thought :)
Here are some useful links
Cranial
Nerves
Tutorial-(Human Brain)