HomeHomesoftwaresoftwarewebsiteswebsitescontactcontactaboutabout

    Neon Ant Software offers you websites with...
  • dynamic content that is database-driven
  • a content management system
  • a newsletter management system
  • customised forms
  • customised search facility
  • unique features that you want for your business website
  • search engine optimization
  • web hosting and management

Some companies require a clean, corporate look that is highly functional and fast to load, while others are looking for polished graphics and animation that will appeal to their target client base. Whatever your needs, contact us today to see what we can do for your business.

You can get your business a powerful, database-driven website complete with a Content Management System (CMS), which basically lets you edit the text of your website pages using just your browser in a friendly Word-like interface.

  • No more messing around with downloadable software or plugins that give you more headache and have you on the phone to Support.
  • No more bills every time you need to make modifications to some of the wording on your site.
  • No more having to wait for your urgent changes to be made.

This whole CMS will run on Internet Explorer 5.5 or higher with nothing more required. We are currently working to also implement this system on Mozilla compatible browsers like Netscape Navigator and Firefox so that clients not on Windows platforms can also edit their website easily.

You can have a fantastic newsletter manager that lets your website visitors subscribe to your own groups allowing you to e-mail them all later with any specials, information, news or whatever you want! You can also choose to have new subscribers confirm their e-mail if you think they might be concerned about privacy issues. It even comes with its own statistics letting you know exactly how many subscribers are in your lists. Beat that!

 

Still not convinced? Read on ...

You will also get website statistics showing you all the details of hits and visitors to your website, complete with colour graphs and tables.

At Neon Ant Software we only host websites that we build ourselves. Why? By only hosting websites that we have built ourselves we are able to eliminate the sloppy coding practices and heavy reliance on third-party products that are produced by inexperienced or "rushed for time" web designers. By confirming your website now you will get your first month of Web hosting FREE! That's right. :)

Normal Web hosting charges are $30 +GST per month and you will not be tied into any long term Web hosting agreements for several years like some other companies. The websites are managed by Neon Ant Software but the servers are physically located in the secured, temperature controlled server rooms of a national ISP (Internet Service Provider) with large bandwidth capability. The servers are also connected to an uninterruptable power supply (UPS), which means that in cases where there are power fluctuations, spikes or blackouts, the Web servers will continue to run from large battery power.

 

Need more convincing? Whew! OK. Here goes...

 

Get Neon Ant Software to design and host your new website and you will get a one year guarantee* that you will be completely satisfied with the website and our service. That's 12 months risk-free!** You can't really lose. With all of these features, you will end up getting a great website that is fast-loading and running smoothly, as well as the comfort of knowing that you have got experts in the website business on your side.

If you have more complex website needs or requirements please contact Rob directly to find out exactly what is possible or to get an obligation free quote.

So what are you waiting for? Contact Neon Ant Software now for your website before this great special is all over!

 

 *  Conditions apply
** Monthly ISP payments cannot be refunded and conditions apply

   
 



Are you getting into digital photos? See the team at Photo & Digital for all your digital photo processing needs.


Russia faces fresh condemnation
Seven of the world's top industrialised nations deplore Russia's decision to recognise Georgia's breakaway regions.

Bill Clinton to address Democrats
Former President Bill Clinton is to deliver a keenly awaited speech at the US Democratic Party convention in Denver, Colorado.

Malta fears 71 migrants drowned
As many as 71 African migrants drown after their boat sinks in the Mediterranean Sea, their companions tell Maltese police.

'Scores dead' in Pakistan clashes
Pakistan's military says it has killed 47 pro-Taleban militants in the rugged west of the country, near Afghanistan.

Gaddafi charged over cleric's kidnap
Lebanon indicts Libya's leader over the disappearance of a revered Shia cleric during a visit to the country 30 years ago.

Mugabe 'to form government alone'
Zimbabwe's leader Robert Mugabe says he will form a government without the opposition, state media reports.

Exhausted Dalai Lama stops trips
The Dalai Lama is suffering from exhaustion and has cancelled all international trips, officials say.

Thai protesters ordered arrested
Thai authorities issue arrest warrants for leaders of a two-day-old protest inside the prime minister's compound in Bangkok.

SA rottweiler rescues boy from pit bull
A South African Rottweiler rescues a two-year-old boy being savaged by a pit bull terrier despite efforts to free him.

Robo-skeleton lets paralysed people walk
A human exoskeleton robotic suit is helping people paralysed from the waist down to stand, walk and climb stairs.

Computer virus is alive and well on the International Space Station
Laptops taken to the International Space Station were infected with a computer virus, Nasa confirms.

Last-gasp Kuyt puts Liverpool through
Liverpool scrape into the group stages of the Champions League after a 118th minute goal from Dirk Kuyt against Standard Liege.

India beat Sri Lanka & win series
Sri Lanka lose a second consecutive home one-day series for the first time in their history as India beat them by 46 runs.

Deep divisions
Why protesters have returned to Bangkok's streets

Washington diary
Anxiety afflicts the Democrats as they meet in Denver

Driven apart
Afghan air strike drives wedge between allies

Ghost town
Boom turns to bust for Spain's property market

Changing times
A market economy begins to emerge in North Korea

Emblem in trouble
Climate change threat to Lebanon's cedar trees

Sudan plane hijackers surrender
Two hijackers of a Sudanese plane surrender after flying it to Libya and releasing the passengers, officials say.

Ethiopia welcomes Olympics stars
Thousands of cheering Ethiopians line the streets of Addis Ababa to welcome home Olympic gold-medallists.

Brazil set for Indian land ruling
Brazil's Supreme Court is preparing to rule on the status of an indigenous reserve disputed by Indians and farmers.

Headless bodies found in Mexico
Police in Mexico find three decapitated bodies on a rubbish dump in Tijuana, apparently victims of gang-related violence.

S Korea accuses refugee of spying
A 35-year-old North Korean woman is arrested in South Korea on suspicion of spying for her homeland.

Japan worker killed in Afghanistan
A Japanese aid worker abducted in Afghanistan earlier this week is found shot dead, Afghan officials say.

Oslo trial for Bosnia war suspect
A Bosnian-born man pleads not guilty in Norway's first war crimes trial since the end of World War II.

EU's ageing trend to rise sharply
The EU predicts a big rise in pensioners, with only two working-age people for every person aged 65 or more by 2060.

Egypt urges end to Israel threats
Egypt is trying to defuse growing tension between Israel and Lebanon, its foreign minister says.

Iran hangs second teenage killer
Human rights organisations condemn the execution of a second juvenile offender in Iran within a week.

India clashes denounced by Pope
The Pope says he is "profoundly saddened" by deadly violence between Hindus and Christians in India's eastern Orissa state.

Pakistan restores eight judges
Eight of the judges sacked in November by former Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf are reinstated.

What next for President Musharraf?
Following the resignation of President Pervez Musharraf, Chris Morris considers the former leader's future.

Georgia fails to escape its past
Edward Stourton looks at how the conflict in South Ossetia is playing out in the streets of the capital, Tbilisi.

Your say
What do you want the world to talk about?