
#BETTER THAN SITE SUCKER INSTALL#
#BETTER THAN SITE SUCKER PDF#
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If it passes my further tests I'll add configuration notes to this post and I'll be making a donation (much as I dislike using PayPal!). I'm going to try tuning it and corresponding with the author about the tag links. I suspect Teleport Pro is a more robust solution - but it's XP only and it can no longer handle my blog. The localization seems to work for some links, but not, as mentioned earlier, for the tag links. The first time I did the download I forgot to localize my links, so I couldn't navigate internally. The download doesn't include any images, they're included by reference since I constrained the spider to my blogger path. It's not nearly as fast as TP Pro, and it wasn't able to handle blogger's tag links (I need to contact the author) but, overnight, it completed the download of over 15,000 separate files related to about 4,000 posts occupying 560MB of disk space (clearly the actual text is the least of the content). I used it to download the site that broke Teleport Pro.

I'd used it years ago, but even back then my much smaller blogs broke it.

It's donationware (Paypal, sigh) and a quick download with no nasty system side-effects. Instead I decided to re-evaluate an OS X spider I'd tested years ago: SiteSucker for OS X. I've been very pleased with TPP, so if I weren't (with occasional regrets) primarily an OS X shop these days I'd pay for the upgrade.
#BETTER THAN SITE SUCKER UPGRADE#
TP has great support, and the author referred me to a $165 upgrade to their professional web spider. More recently Google has added the ability to export one's blog in a google-readable format, so I do that as well. That way, if Google falls to the The Dapocalypse I'll at least have my own copy of my extended cybernetic memory. For several years I've used Teleport Pro to create local searchable and browsable copies of my Blogger blogs.
