Web page saver (e.g., like SurfSaver)

  • Thread starter Thread starter jackson
  • Start date Start date
J

jackson

People who do research via WWW find their bookmarked pages move and
disappear, and usually need to to store a copy of pages on their local hard
drive for future reference. I'm searchning for a freeware product like
SufSaver (.com, commercial product) that makes it easy to save,
categorize, and retrieve web pages by project, date, etc. I'd be interested
in any first hand experience with a freeware product that does this.
Thanks.
 
People who do research via WWW find their bookmarked pages move and
disappear, and usually need to to store a copy of pages on their local hard
drive for future reference. I'm searchning for a freeware product like
SufSaver (.com, commercial product) that makes it easy to save,
categorize, and retrieve web pages by project, date, etc. I'd be interested
in any first hand experience with a freeware product that does this.
Thanks.
If you are using Firefox, there is an extension called ScrapBook that
does this.
 
If you are using Firefox, there is an extension called ScrapBook that
does this.

As a matter of interest, how does this compare to the IE .mht method ?
Where a complete web page is saved as one file. Does it save a page as
one file ? Or multiples ?
 
As a matter of interest, how does this compare to the IE .mht
method ? Where a complete web page is saved as one file. Does it
save a page as one file ? Or multiples ?

Scrapbook saves them as multiple files, with an RDF file to keep track
of the collection's structure. It's all transparent to the user,
because of the nice sidebar GUI for browsing the collection.

There's a separate extension for people who would rather pile all a
page's files into one archive as IE will. <http://maf.mozdev.org/>
 
Scrapbook saves them as multiple files, with an RDF file to keep track
of the collection's structure. It's all transparent to the user,
because of the nice sidebar GUI for browsing the collection.
There's a separate extension for people who would rather pile all a
page's files into one archive as IE will. <http://maf.mozdev.org/>

Thanks for both the answer, and the link. :-)

Regards, John.
 
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