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David A. Karp

"Windows Vista Annoyances: Tips, Secrets, and Hacks"

g.,
YouTube, Google Video, etc.).
Handling Online Video | 163
Working with
Media
Greasemonkey User Script (Greasemonkey extension plus Firefox/
SeaMonkey). If you have the Greasemonkey extension (available from
http://greasespot.net), go to http://1024k.de/bookmarklets/videobookmarklets.
html, click the ???All-In-One Video Script??? link, and
then click Install. Next, navigate to a video page, and click the yellow
bar that appears to display the download link.
Firefox Extension (Firefox only). First, install the VideoDownloader
extension from http://videodownloader.net/, and then restart Firefox.
Next, navigate to a video page, and click the VideoDownloader status
bar icon to display a pop-up window with the download link.
Apple QuickTime
QuickTime files are typically the easiest videos to deal with. If the video
file is playing by itself in the center of the browser window, select Page
??? Save As in Internet Explorer (or File ??? Save As in any other browser).
If the video is playing in a standalone QuickTime window, you can select
File ??? Save As and save the file right on the spot, but only if you??™re using
QuickTime Pro (the extra-cost upgrade to the free QuickTime player).
Pull Files Out of Your Browser Cache
Web browsers store copies of recently viewed pages and all associated media
(images, audio, and video) in a folder on your hard disk, called the cache. This
improves performance when you??™re surfing, but also makes it easy to grab
copies of media files??”such as Flash videos (.


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