elijah wright wrote:
Wget is another free possibility, but why make things difficult, when a free Windows based program such as HTTrack exists? No commands to learn! No tedious installation routines!
because someone might want the additional flexibility to make their research better?
isn't that the real goal, here?
No, not really. As is often the case, there is a trade-off between flexibility (read: complexity) and parsimony (read: easy of use). Maximum complexity is not always the best solution. At the moment, I cannot see how the alleged greater flexibility of wget would improve research. If I want to capture an entire website, then HTTrack seems to do the job. It seems to do it even more complete than wget: (Funny languages only!) http://linuxfr.org/~blackshack/2889.html http://lists.bxlug.be/pipermail/linux-bruxelles/2002-September/005497.html http://groups-beta.google.com/group/de.comp.lang.php.misc/msg/76f85bf9a2bef5... (http://tinyurl.com/bqwqp) It's thus faster than wget and, unlike wget, HTTTrack can retrieve some broken links and, more importantly, it captures some dynamic URLs (though not all of them). Some even claim that HTTrack is more powerful (flexible?) than wget: http://lists.gulp.linux.it/pipermail/gulp/2004-May/002747.html If you want to capture an entire website, HTTrack thus seems both better suited and easier to operate. What are some examples for the greater flexibilty of wget? BTW: There are GUIs for wget: http://kmago.sourceforge.net/index.htm http://www.jensroesner.de/wgetgui/ And finally, yet another supposedly good non-freeware application is: http://www.tenmax.com/teleport/pro/home.htm Haven't tried it yet, so I must rely on reviews here, which say that this is the best option. Thomas -- thomas koenig, ph.d. http://www.lboro.ac.uk/research/mmethods/staff/thomas/