feature. Then, when you find that someone else has the page you need, you can easily fire off an e-mail telling that person to check it back in so you can work on it, just by clicking that persons name in the Files window. (Bribes can be more effective than threats, especially when you offer chocolate.) Developers on your team can use the following steps to associate their e-mail addresses with their version of Dreamweaver as part of the Check In/Check Out setup: 1. Choose Site?Manage Sites. The Manage Sites dialog box opens. 2. Select the site you want to work on and then click the Edit button. The Site Definition dialog box opens. 3. Click the Advanced tab. 4. In the Category list at the left, choose Remote Info. The Remote Info page appears (refer to Figure 4-16). 5. Select the Enable File Check In and Check Out check box. 6. Select the Check Out Files When Opening check box. 7. Enter your name in the Check Out Name text box. Nicknames are okay as long as everyone on the team knows your silly name. 8. Enter your e-mail address in the Email Address text box. 9. Click OK to save your changes. Click the Done button in the Manage Sites dialog box. The Manage Sites dialog box closes. Using Design Notes If you sometimes forget the details of your work or neglect to tell your colleagues important things about the Web site youre all working on, the Dreamweaver Design Notes feature may save you some grief. Design Notes are ideal if you want to hide sensitive information from visitors, such as pricing structures or creative strategies, but make it available to members of your development team. Information saved as a Design Note in Dreamweaver can travel with any HTML file or image, even if the file transfers from one Web site to another or from Fireworks to Dreamweaver. 114 Part II: Looking Like a Million (Even on a Budget) Essentially, Design Notes enable you to record information (such as a message to another designer on your team) and associate it with a file or folder. Design Notes work a lot like the comment tag (HTML code that enables you to embed text in a page that wont display in a browser) but with a bit more privacy. Unlike the comment tag, which is embedded directly in the HTML code of a page (and can be seen if someone views the source code behind a page on the Web), Design Notes are never visible to your visitors. The only way for a visitor to view Design Notes is to deliberately type the path to your notes subdirectory and view the notes files directly. You can even explicitly block this from being allowed, but only if you have administrative access to your server. To be even more secure, you can keep the notes on your hard drive and prevent them from ever being uploaded to your server - though, of course, your team members wont see your witty remarks. To access the Design Notes page, choose Design Notes in the Category list in the Site Definition dialog box (see Figure 4-17). The settings on this page enable you to control how Dreamweaver uses Design Notes: _ Maintain Design Notes: Select this option to ensure that the Design Note remains attached to the file when you upload, copy, or move it. _ Upload Design Notes for Sharing: Choose this option to include Design Notes when you send files to the server via FTP. _ Clean Up: This button enables you to delete Design Notes no longer associated with files or folders in your site. When you create graphics in Macromedia Fireworks, you can save a Design