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Anyone who does a bit of publishing, as well as anyone with a general interest in internet content, can use a simple and useful program to archive web pages DubbySnap from the workshop of German programmer Michael Kammerlander.

After clicking the button More a browser window will open where we enter the desired address. In this window, everything behaves like in Safari, after all, DubbySnap also uses the WebKit engine. After we get to the desired address, we save its current state by clicking the button An image . The page is saved in its entirety, regardless of length and width.

DubbySnap stores everything except the flash content in the snapshot. The internal format is PDF, and any saved page can be exported to one of the output formats - PDF, JPEG, JPEG2000, PNG, GIF, TIFF, or it can be sent by e-mail. Individual images can be provided with a comment and a color tag, the URL and the date and time of the image are also recorded. Pages are stored in the order in which they were downloaded and cannot be sorted differently in this version. The database of stored images can be filtered by text written in the search field, which compensates for this certain drawback. Slides can be displayed as a list or icons.

Although the program is easy to use, you can find a Czech manual for it <a href="https://cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/1932/8043/files/200721_ODSTOUPENI_BEZ_UDANI_DUVODU__EN.pdf?v=1595428404" data-gt-href-en="https://en.notsofunnyany.com/">here</a>. In the beta test phase, there was a page that crashed the program, namely the Land Registry, but even the crash of the program did not mean the loss of scanned pages. The version that is now in the Mac App Store is correct and the cadastre will no longer dump it.

The program is also available in Czech and requires Mac OS X 10.6.6 or later.

[button color=red link=http://itunes.apple.com/cz/app/dubbysnap/id502876409 target=”“]DubbySnap – €3,99[/button]

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