Find the information on the web is one thing. Capturing it is quite another. Some website information is dynamic, moving and includes audio and video. Some webpages go deep and not all the page shows up on the screen, regardless of how large a screen you are using and so how to capture all that information. Also - where are you going to place the web information and how to get it to those places? You can use the PRNTSCR button on your keyboard to capture into memory of the computer the whole screen or use the ALT-PRNTSCR buttons at the same time to just capture the 'window' of the website into memory then use CONTROL+V to paste what is in memory into Word or PowerPoint. But these methods only capture the visible portion of the website. What are the legal reasons you may want to capture this information? Slanderous audio, video, web text, images and other litigation issues may require this kind of capturing. There maybe evidence of breath of contract, liable and this information could disappear off the web unless captured in a timely fashion. And in the legal office, there maybe videos and audio and web pages that might be helpful in presenting a case and these might not be available via the internet during the court proceedings.
First lets see how we can zoom in or out on a web page using the tool built into a browser. I am going to use Chrome's built in zoom tool in the upper right corner. Before you start to capture websites and pages this is a must consideration.
1. Fine Screen Capture or PowerPoint's Insert Screen Capture both of which record not only the screens you are browsing and showing on your screen but also any audio or video that is being displayed on the social webpage or website.
2. Printing a page to OneNote
3. Printing a page to a PDF file
4. Snipping tools
5. Insert portions of web pages directly into Word, PowerPoint using the insert screen snip tool
6. Saving a web page
7. Saving a Youtube video with 4k video downloader
8. viewing the source code and then copying it and pasting it into Word
9. using Google's save to Google Drive capture tool:
Here's how:
Go to the Chrome Web store and search for "save to google drive" in the search box. ...
Select it and install it
click on the Screen Capture button on the Chrome toolbar and select Capture Whole Page
https://chrome.google.com/webstore/search/save%20to%20google%20drive
You can change the option as to what kind of file the google website saver will use - one such type is mhtml - see the sub page below for an explanation. The other type of files youc an save with this tool are PNG file of the whole page or just a portion that is showing on the screen and see below the pull down menu for options: