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There are many editors available which are suitable for authoring web pages. One good way to get started is to find a page you like, save it to a file (choose “Save As…” in your browser), then load it into the text editor of your choice, and start modifying it.
If you don't want to use a standard Unix editor such as vim, emacs or nedit, we recommend Komodo Edit (available for Linux, Windows and Mac), from http://www.activestate.com/komodo-edit
If you don't like doing things this way, there are some passable WYSIWYG editors available. For Windows, you can use Dreamweaver, or on Linux you could try Kompozer.
You can edit images on Linux systems using gimp, a free, Photoshop-like package.
On Physics Windows systems, several tools are available, including Photoshop, Xara, and Paint.NET.
Files and documents which can't easily be reformatted as HTML are probably best converted to PDF (Adobe's Portable Document Format). You can do this using either the full version of Adobe's Acrobat (from the faculty toolkit), or on Unix/Linux using ghostscript.
Existing paper documents can easily be transferred to PDF files on the web using the multifunction printer/scanner in room 216 (TODO: link to the scanner page).
TeX documents can be converted to HTML (with some limitations) using the Unix program tth (TeX-to-HTML).