- From: Eduard Pascual <herenvardo@gmail.com>
- Date: Fri, 2 Apr 2010 22:26:42 +0200
On Fri, Apr 2, 2010 at 9:41 PM, Thomas Broyer <t.broyer at gmail.com> wrote: > On Fri, Apr 2, 2010 at 8:39 PM, Eduard Pascual <herenvardo at gmail.com> wrote: >> >> On Fri, Apr 2, 2010 at 6:25 PM, Doug Schepers <doug at schepers.cc> wrote: >> > I don't think it's defined anywhere, but a browser could choose to save >> > bundled resources as a self-contained Widget ("File > Save as Widget..."), >> > which would be a great authoring solution for Widgets. >> >> Isn't that the same thing, in essence, as MS did with IE? IIRC, IE had >> an choice, on its save dialog, to "Save full page", which packed the >> html page + all the CSS, JS, image, and other dependencies within a >> ".mht" (called meta-HTML) file (which, of course, only IE would be >> able to open afterwards). > > MHTML stands for MIME-encapsulated HTML and is an IETF RFC: > http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc2557.txt I can't remember for sure where I saw the "meta HTML" name, but I'm sure I had seen it somewhere. Anyway, thanks for the correction. >> The fact is that this feature has been removed from the more recent >> versions of IE (not sure if it was from IE6 or 7). It would be >> interesting to know why MS decided why such a feature should be >> removed. > > Selecting Page -> Save as... on IE8 brings the save file dialog with > the type defaulting to "Web Archive, single file (*.mht)" My apologies: vague memory + not testing = stupid post from me ^^; After a bit of research to refresh my memory, I've found that what MS removed from IE was the "offline favorites" feature, and MHT was portrayed as a better alternative. I just got a "404 Brain Not Found" and mixed things up. So feel free to simply ignore my previous e-mail, since it was entirely based on a mistaken assumption. Regards Eduard Pascual
Received on Friday, 2 April 2010 13:26:42 UTC