From e41657480f3a637973d7b036c1729ac2ce3c6faa Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Nick Sweeting Date: Wed, 23 Jan 2019 02:16:28 -0500 Subject: [PATCH] Update README.md --- README.md | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/README.md b/README.md index 07d24189..feb450f9 100644 --- a/README.md +++ b/README.md @@ -29,7 +29,7 @@ **ArchiveBox takes a list of website URLs you want to archive, and creates a local, static, browsable HTML clone of the content from those websites (it saves HTML, JS, Media files, PDFs, Images and more).** -You can use it to preserve access to websites you care about by storing them locally offline. ArchiveBox works by rendering the pages in a headless browser, then saving the fully loaded pages in multiple redundant common formats (HTML, PDF, PNG, WARC) that will last long after the original content dissapears off the internet. It also submits the page to archive.org and automatically extracts assets like audio, video, subtitles, images, and pdfs into separate files using `youtube-dl` and `wget`. +You can use it to preserve access to websites you care about by storing them locally offline. ArchiveBox works by rendering the pages in a headless browser, then saving the fully loaded pages in multiple redundant common formats (HTML, PDF, PNG, WARC) that will last long after the original content dissapears off the internet. It also automatically extracts assets like git repositories, audio, video, subtitles, images, and pdfs into separate files using `youtube-dl` and `wget`. If you run it on a schedule and import your browser history or bookmarks continuously, you can sleep soundly knowing that at the end of the day the slice of the internet you care about will be automatically preserved in a durable format for long-term storage.