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#1
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Which browser has the easiest to find cache?
In reading how to info on the internet, apparently the old easy to find cache is a thing of the past.
I want to grab some video from Red News from the cache since the normal methods (Yes I read the sticky) don't work. |
#2
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I think it might also depend on your operating system. Which one do you have?
Fango
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#3
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Quote:
I once had a video that i wnted to save, so i used a screen capture program and another program to capture sound. I then had to edit them together. CP. . |
#4
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Quote:
tried the cap site from the sticky. nada. tried YTD. Nope FVD. Nope |
#5
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The most user friendly browser where you can easily locate cache (even edit settings) would be IE, although it is by far the browser which is most frowned upon by web designers since it follows a different rule compared to firefox, chrome, safari and opera
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#6
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If you are willing to use old technology I can tell you that I use Netscape 4.7.7 with my old Mac (OS9.2.2) and any image (static or dynamic) that you can see on the screen will be found in the Netscape cache folder (located inside the Netscape folder located inside the Preferences Folder which is in the System Folder). Some streaming videos will self erase so the trick is to pause them before they finish and pull the appropriate cache file to a desktop folder, or if that doesn't work, to duplicate the cache file and pull that to a different location. In some cases when Netscape can't find the URL of the video, finding it in a modern browser and plugging that into Netscape will do the trick. It seems to me though that since Mozilla and Firefox are based on Netscape they might operate the same way, although they might use invisible folders for cache, but you can make folders visible, at least on a Mac.
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