Let's be blunt. People aren't coming to your site to see your file structure or clean CSS code. They're coming to your site to view the content you post. So why would you spend any time thinking about files, folders, and HTML when you could zero-in on creating and organizing content?
Simple provides you the tools to focus on content creation. New pages can be added anywhere with a single click. Instead of staying awake for a midnight launch, you can schedule pages to appear and disappear at specific times. Using the open-sourced Xinha tool and Linker plugin, simple offers WYSIWYG page editing in a browser window, with the ability make links to pages in the site off a site-map.
The simple image manager places your library of images at your fingertips. When you're editing a page a column on the right-hand side of the screen shows all the images and folders you've uploaded and allows for you to insert an image on the page with one quick click.
Simple's hierarchical site structure frees you from worrying about file locations and structure and allows you to place content where it's needed with no barriers or delays. Each piece of content is uniquely identified within the simple system and since the links are constructed using these unique identifiers content can be moved around and re-arranged without breaking - or even requiring updates to - the links in your menus and web pages.
We all get interrupted from time to time. Simple's draft feature allows you to save a temporary version of a page without posting it to the website. You could be halfway through writing a page when an emergency strikes, you realize you're missing source materials, or you come down with a case of writer's block. No problem. Just click the button labeled "Save" and come back to it when you're ready. Until you choose to publish the page, there will be no changes visible to your visitors.
Simple can store any number of page versions, so if you happen to put the wrong information up or delete some text inadvertently you can retrieve it later with just a few clicks. Browse to the page, click on "revisions" from the simple menu, find the last good version, and click the "restore" button to bring it back to the live site.