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by Dennis O Reilly [http://www.
cnet.
com/profile/doreilly/] | September 26, 2011 4:08 PM
PDT
The other day someone asked me how to save a copy of a Web page....
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CNET How To © CBS Interactive.
All rights reserved.
[http://www.
cnet.
com/profile/doreilly/]
by Dennis O Reilly [http://www.
cnet.
com/profile/doreilly/] | September 26, 2011 4:08 PM
PDT
The other day someone asked me how to save a copy of a Web page.
The person wanted to preserve the content of the page--text and
images--in a local file rather than simply bookmark the page s link to
the hosting server.
There are many reasons why you would want to save the text and other content of a
Web page.
For example, you may want to access the information without a network
connection.
You may also want to record the page s content lest the information become
unavailable for whatever reason.
Pages go offline all the time, some never to return.
Just ask anyone who has clicked a broken bookmark.
Here are five different ways to copy a Web page s content for offline browsing, plus a
reason why you may never need to bookmark another page.
The Quick Draw McGraw approach: The fastest way to ca
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