Hello,
Google drive lets you host too.
Thanks,
Cornel Darden Jr.
MSLIS
Library Department Chair
South Suburban College
7087052945
"Our Mission is to Serve our Students and the Community through lifelong learning."
Sent from my iPhone
> On May 22, 2015, at 8:13 AM, Charlie Morris <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
>
> I've never done this, but I've heard you can use DropBox in an unofficial
> capacity to host basic pages too:
> http://www.dropboxwiki.com/tips-and-tricks/host-websites-with-dropbox
>
> On Fri, May 22, 2015 at 8:59 AM, Joe Hourcle <[log in to unmask]>
> wrote:
>
>> On Fri, 22 May 2015, Sarles Patricia (18K500) wrote:
>>
>> [trimmed]
>>
>> I plan to teach coding to my 6th and 12th grade students next school year
>>> and our lab has a mixture of old (2008) and new Macs (2015) so I want to
>>> make all the Macs functional for writing code in an editor.
>>>
>>> My next question is this:
>>>
>>> I am familiar with free Web creation and hosting sites like Weebly, Wix,
>>> Google sites, Wikispaces, WordPress, and Blogger, but do you know of any
>>> free hosting sites that will allow you to plug in your own code. i.e. host
>>> your own html files?
>>
>> If it's straight HTML, and doesn't need any sort of text pre-processing
>> (SSI, ASP, JSP, PHP, ColdFusion, etc.), I think that you can use Google
>> Drive. This help page seems to suggest that's true:
>>
>> https://support.google.com/drive/answer/2881970?hl=en
>>
>> With all static files it might also be possible to lay things out so that
>> you could serve it through github or similar. (and teaching them about
>> version control isn't a bad idea, either)
>>
>> -Joe
>>
|