BookMark Master

BookMark Manager, Manage Your Favorites
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-->System Requirements:
Windows 98/ME/NT/2000/XP
32MB Memory
10MB Disk Space


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Q1: What is Bookmark?

To mark a document or a specific place in a document for later retrieval. Nearly all Web browsers support a bookmarking feature that lets you save the address (URL) of a Web page so that you can easily re-visit the page at a later time.

When you "bookmark" a page, you tell your Web browser to remember that page's address (URL), so that you can go back to it easily, without having to type in the URL again.

Bookmarks are called "favorites" in Microsoft Internet Explorer. It keeps your place, much like a bookmark in a book does.

Most browsers have an easy method of saving the URL to create a bookmark.

Microsoft Web editors use the term bookmark to refer to a location within a hyperlink destination within a Web page, referred to elsewhere as an anchor.




Q2: What is Favorites?

Sometimes called bookmark, your "favorites" list makes it easy to return to sites you've found.

In Microsoft Internet Explorer you can tell the program to remember a list of your "favorite" Web pages, so that you can go back to them easily, without having to type in the address (URL) again.

When you add a page to your favorites, you can jump to it again by clicking "favorites" on the tool bar and selecting from the list.

"Favorites" are similar to the "bookmarks" used by Netscape Navigator and other browsers.




 

 

 

 

 

 

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