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It does not appear possible to either open all of the (or selected) links on a page in tabs nor print all of the pages in tabs (like a book).

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In applications that use a browser control or open web pages, there are frequently (nearly always) mechanisms to open multiple links on a page in tabs, print all (or selected) tabs, or print all linked pages (the latter is pretty much universal as an OS call). Additionally, like Links (in IE) or Bookmarks (in Mozilla) can be 'named', so can 'tabs'. Some editors (and applications) permit tabs to be 'named'. As I recall, in an editing mode, Netscape used to do this, just like you could edit a page. For authors and researchers, this would be invaluable primarily because neither are frequented by earnings capable of affording those spendy apps like Adobe or Corel that do that, because programmatically it is reasonably simple to maintain an association of symbolic links, and that Mozilla could immediately become the browser of choice as IE can do nothing of the sort (well, may be new IE can).

ps. If you would like to see the seven pages of remarks that follow that period after the paren, email me an answer to my 'question'. Incidentally, if you might find this impudent, before you say that to anybody, discover me, who patented 1,821:1 data compression, before you get too far down that path. 2012 is going to be a new world in technology, I promise.

In applications that use a browser control or open web pages, there are frequently (nearly always) mechanisms to open multiple links on a page in tabs, print all (or selected) tabs, or print all linked pages (the latter is pretty much universal as an OS call). Additionally, like Links (in IE) or Bookmarks (in Mozilla) can be 'named', so can 'tabs'. Some editors (and applications) permit tabs to be 'named'. As I recall, in an editing mode, Netscape used to do this, just like you could edit a page. For authors and researchers, this would be invaluable primarily because neither are frequented by earnings capable of affording those spendy apps like Adobe or Corel that do that, because programmatically it is reasonably simple to maintain an association of symbolic links, and that Mozilla could immediately become the browser of choice as IE can do nothing of the sort (well, may be new IE can). ps. If you would like to see the seven pages of remarks that follow that period after the paren, email me an answer to my 'question'. Incidentally, if you might find this impudent, before you say that to anybody, discover me, who patented 1,821:1 data compression, before you get too far down that path. 2012 is going to be a new world in technology, I promise.