The front page is the first page of a newspaper or magazine and contains the most important stories of the day. The back pages can contain less important stories, advertisements or other content. The term front-page can also refer to the main page of an online news site or blog.
Front-page material is a great place to tease other materials readers can find in your book or other products you have available. For example, if you have an e-book series, the back page could feature an excerpt from the next title or include a link where readers can purchase it.
Back-page is the last pages of a publication, typically a newspaper or magazine. The back-page can have less important articles or advertisements than the front-page and can also include teasing stories of lesser importance. The word is often used in a negative way and can have connotations of obscurity or lesser significance compared to the front-page.
Microsoft FrontPage (full name: Microsoft Office FrontPage) was a WYSIWYG HTML editor and website management application for creating Web sites on Windows operating systems. It was included in the Microsoft Office suite of software from 1997 to 2003. Microsoft has since discontinued FrontPage and replaced it with two desktop-based products: Microsoft Expression Web and Microsoft SharePoint Designer.
In addition to the graphical editing features, FrontPage also included a set of server-side extensions known as FrontPage Server Extensions. This set of tools enabled FrontPage to communicate with Web servers and provide additional functionality for websites. However, the extensions were prone to security problems and Microsoft eventually shifted to standard protocols for remote Web publishing and authoring.