[WEB4LIB] Screen capture software for web presentations

Luis Domingues lfd at libri.ucp.pt
Wed May 17 03:04:30 EDT 2000


I use anawave websnake (www.anawave.com) or teleport. You may also consider
using Black Widow.
There are also some free products ...
You can download any of those from www.tucows.com (offline browsers
section).
I think IE5 also has that feature, but I've never tried it.

Luis Filipe F. F. Domingues                   E-Mail: lfd at libri.ucp.pt
Biblioteca Universitária João Paulo II        Home Page:
http://www.libri.ucp.pt/
Universidade Católica Portuguesa              Tel: +351 21 7214019
Palma de Cima                                 Fax: +351 21 7214010
1600 Lisboa
Portugal

-----Original Message-----
From: web4lib at webjunction.org
[mailto:web4lib at webjunction.org]On Behalf Of Stacy Pober
Sent: Quarta-feira, 17 de Maio de 2000 4:22
To: Multiple recipients of list
Subject: [WEB4LIB] Screen capture software for web presentations


I want to save web pages so we can use them for demos to classes when
our network is down.  I was looking in the Web4lib archives and the
threads dealing with this were at least two years old - some of the
software recommended is no longer available.

Ideally, I'd like to present these from a web browser, so I don't want
to use screen shots, I want actual captures of the full web pages so the
presenters can scroll to the part of the page they want.  Some of the
web databases we get are using frames and others using javascript
generated windows and I want the canned demo to simulate an actual web
session as much as possible.

There was some discussion here that Webwhacker v.3 was kind of buggy,
but v.2 doesn't seem to be available now.  What are you folks using that
you are happy with.  (If you want to warn me off some software or other,
that's useful information as well!)

--
Stacy Pober, Information Alchemist
Manhattan College Libraries
spober at manhattan.edu
http://www.manhattan.edu/library/



More information about the Web4lib mailing list