* Zope allows you to ftp in and upload DTML and images and the like. emacs allows you to edit files on a remote ftp filesystem, using EFS (?) (someone who uses this please give me a sample of emacs syntax?) You could also use any other form of ftp browser/text browser that allows you to transparently edit remote files via ftp - I'd be suprised if KDE or GNOME didn't have this.
XEmacs EFS syntax: /user@machine#port:/path. Emacs ange-ftp syntax:/user@machine{Hit cntrl-q, then space}port:/path
* Zope has Webdav support - does emacs? IE5 does (well, if you read the zope-checkins list and see Brian's commit messages, IE5 sorta has webdav support)
Ahh, WebDAV. One _big_ problem is that the stupid clients always hand you the _rendered_ version of an object, even though the spec provides for getting the source. Sigh. We've considered a workaround where you could launch a Zope on a different port number and automatically get the source versions when you visited a document.
* Netscape's HTML textarea widget has some limited number of emacs keybindings. This is what I use, because I hate the full emacs with
Well, _now_ you've sunk your credibility. :^)
a passion. If mozilla allowed me to embed nvi (the OneTrueVi) into a html textarea widget, I'd be a happy bunny :)
For those that care, I _believe_ Mozilla is going to use Ender (their HTML and plaintext editor) as the widget for TEXTAREAs and INPUT areas...or at least provide some option to turn this on. With the new HTML-tag experimental syntax in Zope2, it provides some interesting options.
* You could write something that let you edit text files, and batch uploaded (either via ftp, or via the Zope Client interface) the files.
Anyone else got other bits to add?
Yes, but I'll presume you meant anything _intelligent_ to add, so I'll sign off. :^) --Paul