Mar 232007
 

When I first came to Canada I worked at SoftQuad. SoftQuad was one of the first SGML com­pan­ies, well known (in some circles, any­way) for its Pres­id­ent, Yuri Rub­in­sky. And well known in many oth­er circles for its HTML edit­or, HoT­Met­aL. The Sur­rey office did most of the devel­op­ment work on HoT­Met­aL and it was my main focus for quite some time. So it was with a cer­tain amount of nos­tal­gia that I saw HoT­Met­aL lis­ted on eWeek’s Jim Rapoza Picks the Top Web Tech­no­lo­gies of All Time — gone but not for­got­ten, as they say. Thanks to Kim for send­ing me the link.

  6 Responses to “HotMetaL”

  1. Noth­ing like nos­tal­gia. Did you keep any cop­ies of the soft­ware (and maybe com­puter to run it) for old-time’s sake?

  2. Oh yes, I’ve got cop­ies of most of the ver­sions I worked on. I also have the small bottle of Cana­dian Cham­pagne we all were giv­en when HoT­Met­aL PRO 2.0 won PC Magazine Edit­ors’ Choice award in 1995 — I figured it prob­ably was­n’t worth drink­ing, but it was worth keeping.

  3. I still use HoT­Met­aL 6 for my sites. Damn good pro­gram (albeit a few bugs). Tried dream­weaver and a couple oth­er edit­ors but after get­ting good with Hot­Met­aL, everything else just sucks. I’ve seen a few oth­er users with sim­il­ar com­ments in for­ums here and there. 

    Just wish someone had picked it up and con­tin­ued devel­op­ment, or that they had released it to a gnu devel­op­ment com­munity or some­thing. Seems such a waste for it to just fall off a cliff. The tags on view and rules check­ing just haven’t been duplic­ated any­where else that I have found.

  4. Dear Lauren,

    first, let me con­grat­u­late you to the best WYSIWYG web edit­or I’ve seen until today. Most of all I love is the tag view. We still use this soft­ware for mul­tiple of our websites.

    It’s a pity, that HoT­Met­aL will not be developed fur­ther. I agree with Chis’ wish that it became a gnu development.

    I’ve tried to teach HoT­Met­aL cur­rent W3C DTDs like xhtml strict/transitional, but without suc­cess (it uses — as XMet­aL — bin­ary DTD-equivs (rls) I think).

    Nev­er­the­less — a superb “hot” software!

  5. Dear Lauren,
    I nev­er found a Wysi­wyg edit­or that is so con­veni­ent and at the same time pro­duces so clean html. What a pity that it is not developed fur­ther. A GNU devel­op­ment would be great! Can­not the NVU or Kom­pozer people use it?
    What is the latest ver­sion of HoTMetal?
    http://www.powerstream.com/hotmetal-pro-patches.htm
    provides the updates to ver­sion 6.0.3.164. Appar­ently it does under­stand HTML 4.01.
    Is there any way to teach HoT­Met­aL XHTML?
    Shall we form a mailinglist?

  6. Hi Daniel,

    as we dis­cussed in email, ver­sion 6.0 is the latest and final ver­sion, and I don’t even know pre­cisely who owns the rights to it. Maybe Corel still does? 

    There is unfor­tu­nately no way to teach HoT­Met­aL how to under­stand XHTML as there are too many things that would need to be changed. For example, HoT­Met­aL auto­mat­ic­ally upper­cases all the tag names, and it does­n’t under­stand the com­mon empty tag syn­tax. The pro­gram itself would have to be changed to do this. It would be pos­sible, but I guess the people who cur­rently own the rights don’t think it’s worth doing.

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