Oh wow, yes,thank you, I know how to archive live links, but I’ve always just saved to “bookmarks”. I’ve typically used the archiver that ends in .io, BUT I still have to get on the internet to access my Bookmarks. So…it just now occurred to me with your reply that maybe what I really need to do with my “archived” bookmarks is download them and transfer to a drive? If so, then what I really need to know is how to download the archived articles from my Bookmarks to a drive. (I’ve got a lot.)
My thinking is that if/when we get a full on cyber attack and/or Ten Days of Darn-kess/Darkness, we want to have a library of articles cataloging all the evidence documented in hard-copy form. (In other words, we don’t need the internet to access.). I suspect very strongly that if/when that does happen, much will be no longer accessible if/when the internet comes back. Anyway, I thought that is what Q meant about archive offline. Apparently, It’s just the offline part, not the actual archiving, that IDK how to do.
If you’re looking for something offline, then you need your own way back machine, hosted on your own hardware (could be an old laptop your not using anymore)
Go to archive.is
Copy your url into the box that says “My url is alive and I want to archive its content”
Click save
Wait
???
Profit
nice job fren .
Oh wow, yes,thank you, I know how to archive live links, but I’ve always just saved to “bookmarks”. I’ve typically used the archiver that ends in .io, BUT I still have to get on the internet to access my Bookmarks. So…it just now occurred to me with your reply that maybe what I really need to do with my “archived” bookmarks is download them and transfer to a drive? If so, then what I really need to know is how to download the archived articles from my Bookmarks to a drive. (I’ve got a lot.)
My thinking is that if/when we get a full on cyber attack and/or Ten Days of Darn-kess/Darkness, we want to have a library of articles cataloging all the evidence documented in hard-copy form. (In other words, we don’t need the internet to access.). I suspect very strongly that if/when that does happen, much will be no longer accessible if/when the internet comes back. Anyway, I thought that is what Q meant about archive offline. Apparently, It’s just the offline part, not the actual archiving, that IDK how to do.
Again, thank you, fren.
If you’re looking for something offline, then you need your own way back machine, hosted on your own hardware (could be an old laptop your not using anymore)
https://archivebox.io/
Alternatively, most devices let you print to a pdf file, just print the page. Mobile users may require an app but it’s native to windows machines.
Aha, thank you. I’m going with the B option. Much obliged!
That's tite right there son....If only I had the time. Currently organizing my arrowhead collection 😁
The quickest way to get an instance up and running is to use docker. Here’s a sample compose file:
Then you can access the interface from a browser http://localhost:8000