![]() I have tried several, and I have found this to be far beyond anything else. I don’t think you mentioned Tabs Outliner. You mentioned a few tab management tools. ![]() Not to mention, some accidental closes or crashes that lost me an s-load of open tabs with open tasks.Įspecially when I search/research a lot, I use many tabs. I have all of those colors in a search parameter that I occasionally look through and used the unique URL string into tabsnooze for chrome (global search on all my notes in document)Īt some point in this thread you commented about keeping track of open tabs and so on. stands for waiting on because I’m getting tired of waiting on someone else (ZZZZ sleeping), is something important to do or ongoing task, means I have a question with no answer and I need to go find one before assigning a physical task (its a research task basically). CTRL+SHIFT+1,5,6 are all mapped to hotkeys, , respectively, and activates the hotkeys. I always try to post whats in my head every few days somewhere, and it helps that its on a forum (and not on a wordpress blog, etc).Īlso I wrote out what my colorschemas are for notes as well (since I just finished writing this up too). Just today I reread some of your setup posts. I don’t find them weird, as you suggested they would be In fact, many of your posts are really valuable. It’s a companion for Tagspaces but works without it too.īesides saving text of pages to Evernote or grabbing content otherwise (like with wget), SingleFile is the tool for me to capture a page as close to as it is. The Tagspaces Chrome extension does MHTML saving. Scrapbook for Firefox is a similar extension but with a bit of database/search-like functionality added. It contains the HTML page and all the files linked in it.Ī works the same way Google does: it crawls a website and saves a local copy of the page, uncompressed. Chrome can show these as well but to save as MHTML you need a plugin like save as HTMLĪn MHTML file is essentially a ZIP file. If you prefer the 1 file format you can also save as MHTML. If you want to save a page including assests, and would want animated GIFs to stay animated, a better option is to save the page the normal way with your browser, opting for Save Complete Page. ![]() Yes, you can save the embedded images: they behave the same way regular images do. You can verify/test what/how SingleFile saves a page by saving a copy, then disconnecting from the internet and loading the saved page. This is what makes these files so large sometimes ![]() This trick is performed by taking the image and encoding it into a super long string of characters: base64 encoding. The images are saved INSIDE the document. SingeFile saves the HTML and, if you enable it, some JavaScript as well. ![]()
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