Say that I've "printed" a page to a file foo.htm (my notation -- htm to me means printed by lynx, whereas .html means, well, html).
And I save-to-disk lots of these files, eg stuff from wikipedia I want to scan thru at leisure, "off line" (well, off internet-connection). "Oh -- THAT link looks interesting! I want to go there (after reconnecting to the internet).", say. Currently, I'd have to grab, from the "references" stuff at the botton of the printed page, the url associated with that link, eg [123], then later "paste" (or maybe type-in by hand!) into lynx. Sure would be nicer if I could convert that .htm-file to partial-.html, and then I could just "click" the link. ---- (Or, I could simply RE-display (via lynx) that SAME page I was looking at, and then "for real" click on the link THERE. Of course, that would require, for ANY kind of ease, that that source-url OF the "printed" page be easily available, somehow, via the "printed" page I was reading through. (But NO ONE here seems to see that as a useful thing for lynx to produce somewhere within the "printed" page!) ). ---- Anyway, you get the gist of the goal, eg, you download, via lynx, a bunch of "lynx-printed" files onto your blackberry or kibble or whatever, and while doing a tour on a nuclear sub, or going to Mars, you want to read the stuff, somehow noting (and somehow saving-away) links you'd like to follow-up on, someday, when you get home, Ideas? Comments? Thanks! David _______________________________________________ Lynx-dev mailing list [email protected] http://lists.nongnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lynx-dev
