![]() ![]() So, just enter in your URL and click "Download" SiteSucker is a great (free) application! It will allow you to download folders from a site. How can I download all MP3 files from a web site? HTML pages for all available links even looking in the JavaScriptįunctions, so it will show a complete list of web page contents.Īnd I've found the following, when I was searching about your question: Just push the "Pause" button on the Toolbar. It or choose the contextual menu function "Add to queue" and it willĪppear in the queue for download. When you reach the file that you want to download double click on ToĮxplore a HTTP, HTTPS or FTP site select the Site Explorer group itemĪnd choose the contextual menu function "Enter Site URL" to set a site You can easily find and download files you're interested in. Site Explorer allows exploration of the entire web or FTP sites, so It offers convenient downloads managing, flexible settings, etc.įolx has a unique system of sorting and keeping the downloaded content. ![]() That's what I have found, perhaps that can help you :įolx is a free download manager for Mac OS X with a true Mac-style interface. The featured image is provided CC0 by Samuel Zeller via Unsplash.I have found this software for my own use just now and then I remembered your question. Let me know if you have any questions about any of this. A Web Diet: Converting WordPress Sites Over to Static Sites by Adam Croom.Archiving Old WordPress Sites as Static HTML by Alan Levine.So, if you’re hungry for more, here are some larger WordPress archiving projects folks have pursued and written about: I recognize that this post only covers a very small example of using SiteSucker to convert a WordPress website to static HTML. ![]() After modification, I’m happy with the state of this archived website: Wrap Up So, because I deleted the installation of WordPress at after I used the Sitesucker app, I had to open the index.html file in Atom, search for this contact info, and delete the code located in file. Like the Mobile Blogging & Scholarship website, there was some information in the footer (contact info) that I wanted to remove for the archived copy of. This process wasn’t a huge deal, it just took a few minutes of time. After I modified the permissions to 644, the website became accessible to the world. This problem occurred when I uploaded the website, every file defaulted to access permission values of 600 (meaning each file was not readable by any visitor). The second problem I had was needing to go through the website files on the web server and change the access permissions of each. Therefore, currently if you navigate to, you will be redirected to /teaching-learning-conference where the proper index.html file will be accessed and the website should display properly. If you are not redirected automatically, follow this link. Rather than spending a bunch of time rewriting portions of the code in the proper index.html file I just created a new index.html file at the root folder using code from this website to redirect visitors to the right index.html file. This meant that when I visited, it would load a page like so: Instead the proper index.html file was located one folder deep. I did run into a few problems during this process. First, when I used SiteSucker to only download files “2 levels deep,” it didn’t include an index.html file at the root folder of the website. More importantly, I was able to decrease the size of my site from ~65MB to 4.5MB! That feels awesome because 60MB has been reclaimed on my web server!Ī Bit Of Troubleshooting No index.html File At Root Using SiteSucker yielded HTML, CSS, JS, and asset files from my php-based WordPress website. I downloaded an old WordPress website I only briefly used years ago ( ) with the SiteSucker app. :P) Anyways, I feel better about accessing my websites now. will automatically serve encrypted links instead of I’m really EXCITED about completing this project as Google uses in site rankings and Chrome often shows sites as “insecure.” (Goodness, the ways in which Google rules the web has no end. I (finally) secured many of my DoOO websites using this guide from Reclaim Hosting (thanks Tim!). A couple weeks ago, I completed a couple web maintenance projects I’ve been meaning to tackle. ![]()
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