"Build a website using Google Drive
You are already using Google Drive to store your stuff. Why not use it to create your website?
How do to it? Keep reading.
First, create a folder as a top folder. Then place all your assets (css, images, etc.) into the newly created folder.
In the example below, the top folder is called "the insync webpage" with css, images and js folders.
You will also need an index.html. If you do not start with an index.html file, then visitors to your site will see a directory listing of all of the files in that folder, rather than your home page.
Once all your folders and files are synced, right click your webpage folder and select Insync → Copy public link.
Insync "publishes" your content using the Google Drive publish API.
Paste the public URL to a browser and you're done!
Here's the one we did: http://bit.ly/127SJMY
To recap:
Prepare your assets.
Upload your assets on Drive via Insync.
Copy public link.
Don't expect any more steps. You're done.
If your registrar supports URL forwarding, you can forward your domain to the public URL. Would be nice to add DNS redirecting so you can add custom domains in the future.
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"from instructors with distinguished academic pedigrees. For more mundane pursuits, like learning how to paddleboard or build a planter box for the garden, there is an inexhaustible supply of free how-to videos on YouTube, eHow and other sites."
"It's an understatement to say that building a thriving marketplace is tough. Getting both sides of a transaction at the same place at the same time for the same thing can feel like it's an order of magnitude more difficult than a more traditional one-sided commerce business. But when the magic happens, it happens, and all of a sudden you've got Kickstarter."
Google just added a small but interesting new feature to its Google Analytics product. You can now see how much of your site your visitors are really seeing based on the new browser-size analysis the company just added to Google Analytics.