back pagebr> The last pages of a publication.
The front-page of a newspaper or magazine is the main section that contains the major news stories. The back-pages contain other stories, which are less important.
In journalism, a story that makes the front page is considered to be highly significant and of public interest. The story may be either a lead or a secondary lead, but it must have significant relevance to readers and contribute to the news of that day. The front-page of a newspaper also contains ‘puffs’ or ‘blurbs’, which are colour bands or tiles that tease other stories in the edition.
A court has ruled that the Backpage website must be shut down, in response to the murder of sex worker Lacey Hyer and several other alleged crimes committed by her clients. The site had a reputation for allowing the advertising of prostitution services and sex trafficking.
FrontPage is a software application from Microsoft that allows a user to create and edit Web sites. The original version of FrontPage was introduced in 1996 and shipped with the Windows NT 4.0 Server release. It was bundled on CD along with the Web server Internet Information Services 2.0. Up until FrontPage 98, the FrontPage Editor was a separate application from the FrontPage Explorer which was used to manage Web site folders. FrontPage 2003 introduced Intellisense, a form of autocompletion that suggests tags or properties as the user types in Code View. It also allows the creation of code snippets which can be re-used to reduce the amount of typing required to build complex pages.