jack.from.canada
posted this
21 June 2022
Nicepage can create websites that can be "previewed" within the browser. So, if these student sites are not intended to be placed on the actual internet you could probably get away with using the demo version of the product installed on several of your school's desktop computers.
You would only need to worry about licensing if you intended to actually export the projects and upload them to a web server.
I love this product and have used it for many years, so I'm not trying to cut into their revenue; but I also understand trying to save resources in an educational environment, so balance the requirement to not necessarily publish a site vs. the moral decision to support the authors of this wonderful tool.
Nicepage can create websites that can be "previewed" within the browser. So, if these student sites are not intended to be placed on the actual internet you could probably get away with using the demo version of the product installed on several of your school's desktop computers.
You would only need to worry about licensing if you intended to actually export the projects and upload them to a web server.
I love this product and have used it for many years, so I'm not trying to cut into their revenue; but I also understand trying to save resources in an educational environment, so balance the requirement to not necessarily publish a site vs. the moral decision to support the authors of this wonderful tool.