It's not likely, schools block a lot of domains, and saving the URL does not save the information contained on the page, which is where the video is. You are only saving a link to the page you want to access, you're not saving the page itself.
To make a video saved on a HTML work on a computer without internet, you need to point the browser to the locally saved copy of the file. The URL in this case is something like c:\myhtml\savedvideo.HTML, or whatever filesystem naming conventions your computer and browser supports. Note that any dependencies in the HTML file must also be saved on the computer, in positions with the same relative position as on the original web site.
I am assuming you mean the internet browser internet and history. If so this is how you do it; Firefox: tools/options/security/saved passwords Chrome: settings/advanced settings/Managed Saved Passwords I think there is a way with internet explorer too but i cant find it.
No, because the histories will be saved on the browsing software(firefox,google chrome etc) through which that 'someone' is using the internet.
ur saved data such as history, bookmarks , fav, saved passwords will be lost
It wont be saved permentently on your computer. The following information can vary from browser. But when you go online, information is temporarily stored on your computer. Due to more and more people having fast internet there is less need for browsers to store this info, but it still happens.
This will be a web browser problem. It seems like cookies are not saving which will mean you loose all your internet saved games. Try a different web browser or reinstall your default browser. If you are using Internet Explorer, I would download firefox and see how you get on.
No. A PowerPoint presentation will be saved to your computer, and you get open it at any time. Although, if your presentation includes e.g videos from YouTube, they will not work without Internet connection.
A folder that is saved may not be saved forever. A folder that is saved can be retrieved as long as it is saved on the computer. It will not stay forever, because the computer won't last forever.
No BBC iplayer does not take up any memory on your computer as the videos are saved on the internet
Word documents can be saved in their Microsoft format or as a PDF. They can be saved as text which is editable and can be changed at a different date. It can also be saved an image which would not allow for editing but would keep the integrity of the formatting consistent.
depends on what u r going to buy mostly it would be saved to ur computer!!! hope it helped
Get access to a computer with internet. Have a blank CD or a jumpdrive. Begin the download of iTunes on the computer there and then once the installer is downloaded click SAVE instead of RUN. Remember where you saved it. Then just SAVE the iTunes installer onto your disk or jumpdrive and transfer to you computer.