Completely Bonkers
New Member
- Joined
- Feb 6, 2007
- Messages
- 2,576 (0.41/day)
Processor | Mysterious Engineering Prototype |
---|---|
Motherboard | Intel 865 |
Cooling | Custom block made in workshop |
Memory | Corsair XMS 2GB |
Video Card(s) | FireGL X3-256 |
Display(s) | 1600x1200 SyncMaster x 2 = 3200x1200 |
Software | Windows 2003 |
I've been looking for a tool that will monitor a website and let me know if there have been changes. Why is this useful? Let's say you want to track a firmware download site for changes. Or a webforum or news site without having to register and use the internal "subscriber" tools.
I am specifically using this to track printer drivers and router firmware for a number of devices.
After a long search, the best solution/utility I found is called WebMon http://www.btinternet.com/~markwell/webmon/
It'S got some useful options to track just certain elements of a page too! Works well, even though over 5 years old.
This is not an ad for the software, just a tip. We all love useful and free utilities
Let me know if you have found other utilities worth posting here!
FEEDBACK
Use this thread for your comments/feedback on the utility if you try it.
I am specifically using this to track printer drivers and router firmware for a number of devices.
After a long search, the best solution/utility I found is called WebMon http://www.btinternet.com/~markwell/webmon/
It'S got some useful options to track just certain elements of a page too! Works well, even though over 5 years old.
This is not an ad for the software, just a tip. We all love useful and free utilities
Let me know if you have found other utilities worth posting here!
FEEDBACK
Use this thread for your comments/feedback on the utility if you try it.