Online Web Page Capture Tool. This one is a little bit odd. OK, more than a little bit odd. It calls itself 'a internet (sic) archive - find content from the past, or save content to the minute. Anytime, anywhere, for free'. It states that you can save pages and share them with anyone on the go, but I don't see anyway of doing that. It also says 'WJR is the only web archive that lets you see web pages exactly as it was (sic) captured'. So the Internet Archive doesn't do that then? It then goes onto say 'We're here to help the environment'. I presume so that you don't have to print pages out, but it's got some sort of pointless statement there.
I did a search for 'library' and got 5 results, so it's not exactly a hip happening resource. Really don't see what gap this is filling that can't be done by the Internet Archive, diigo et al and screenshot softwares.
Bottom line: A pencil without any lead. Pointless.
I did a search for 'library' and got 5 results, so it's not exactly a hip happening resource. Really don't see what gap this is filling that can't be done by the Internet Archive, diigo et al and screenshot softwares.
Bottom line: A pencil without any lead. Pointless.
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Hello.
I'm the founder of WJR, and I've checked your review. It is true in some aspects but let me clear it up for you.
- Internet Archive is very slow, which is why we decided to make one that works in real-time meaning you can save important moments you have when browsing the web.
- It uses compression technology and utilizes high-end libraries to save money, thus reducing carbon emissions in the environment.
- It is not on the scale of Internet Archive
- It takes 6 months for Internet Archive to save content, so it doesn't make sense.
Hope this clears it up.
Posted by: Bilawal Hameed | June 04, 2010 at 11:36 PM