That is also pretty much the advice I give to any schools or organizations that are looking at developing websites. I came to that through extensive research done a couple of years ago when our agency was looking for a web design package on which to standardize for our own web design use and for the classes we taught on web design.
I made numerous contacts with web design professionals across the country, and found that they were fairly evenly split between using Adobe GoLive and Macromedia Dreamweaver. Universally, however, they advised against the use of FrontPage.
We have found that FrontPage inserts much more proprietary code into webpage files than do the others. Also, GoLive and Dreamweaver files seemed to be fairly interchangeable between the two applications with minimal tweaking. FrontPage files, due to their proprietary nature, took far longer to convert than the others. Sometimes the time involved made it not worth the effort.
FrontPage also seemed to have a number of key features that required the use of other Microsoft software, including server software, and FrontPage extensions. That limited the number of ISPs that could be used and still use all of FrontPage's key features.
The clincher was watching Leo Laporte, a lont-time tech columnist and Windows expert on TechTV (formerly ZDTV) on his ScreenSavers and Call For Help shows, give some not-so-glowing reviews of FrontPage.
In the final analysis, if you are living in a 100% Microsoft world, and all your clients use Internet Explorer for a browser, you're probably fine with FrontPage.
For my money, Adobe GoLive is the best of the lot, and that is what we finally settled on, and continue to use today. It's seamless interaction with the rest of the Adobe suite of graphics and publication applications gives it a slight edge over Dreamweaver. But I certainly have nothing bad to say about Dreamweaver. It's a great application, and I could highly recommend it.