Saving Internet Page(s)

  • Thread starter Thread starter Mikie
  • Start date Start date
M

Mikie

Hi,

WINXP HOME - IE 6.+ - SP2's up to date

When I save an internet page or an email, and I 'm not concerned about
the graphics, I simply save it as a .TXT file.

But when I want all the graphics and the text, I save it as is.

But in MY DOCUMENTS I see (2) files for every (1) graphic Internet
page I save. One is titled, 'files' and the other just now slipped my
mind....(Dain Bramage?)

If I wish to email that internet page, which of the two do I send?
Or both?

Thanks very much, as always for the great help.

Mike
 
Mikie said:
Hi,

WINXP HOME - IE 6.+ - SP2's up to date

When I save an internet page or an email, and I 'm not concerned about
the graphics, I simply save it as a .TXT file.

But when I want all the graphics and the text, I save it as is.

But in MY DOCUMENTS I see (2) files for every (1) graphic Internet
page I save. One is titled, 'files' and the other just now slipped my
mind....(Dain Bramage?)

If I wish to email that internet page, which of the two do I send?
Or both?

You need to either email both the file AND the associated folder, or why not
just email the URL?
 
Mikie said:
Hi,

WINXP HOME - IE 6.+ - SP2's up to date

When I save an internet page or an email, and I 'm not concerned about
the graphics, I simply save it as a .TXT file.

But when I want all the graphics and the text, I save it as is.

But in MY DOCUMENTS I see (2) files for every (1) graphic Internet
page I save. One is titled, 'files' and the other just now slipped my
mind....(Dain Bramage?)

A folder that holds all the graphics, style sheets etc.
If I wish to email that internet page, which of the two do I send?
Or both?

One is the actual page, and the folder has all the non-active stuff that
is copied down. You need both to recreate the page as an order HTML
page is simply text.
Thanks very much, as always for the great help.

Mike

If you want to work with what is included within IE6, the easiest
solution for saving AND emailing a page, is to save it as an MHT file.
AFIACT that can be opened on any Windows machine with IE5.0 or later.

A superior solution is offered with the combination of Firefox browser
and the free Scrapbook extension. The latter by itself is enough to make
you want to switch. http://amb.vis.ne.jp/mozilla/scrapbook/
 
Back
Top