
There’s also the problem of getting a “Time Out message” popup when the page takes too long to display, because some combination of site features have changed so significantly afterupon one’s first download way back when, that one’s Saved Page is no longer recallable… but, meanwhile– all the while– you’ve got this “antique cyber furniture” now taking up space within part of your hard drive’s “cyber living room”– or “cyber bathroom”! And being met with a Windows popup cartoon character and notification, is… well… ridiculous! There are two problems (among others) that are systemic with this “gift”… the first, is not knowing what one is downloading (given the curious size of some of these “pages”), and whether tracking cookies are being appended to each page… and, the second, is the disk space that is wiped out after downloading (and again, given the size of some of these pages). To the issue, one of the dumbest tools that Microsoft came up with for Windows was their “gift” of the ability to save a webpage, through their “Save Page As” option, under “Files (i.e., the ‘Files’ displayed at the top left of one’s Browser screen)”. If you want to read the saved page on your Kindle device, you need to convert it to MOBI using Calibre or a similar program.

When you are ready to stitch the chapters together, click on the Generate eBook button and the add-on will save the EPUB to your drive. Note: I couldn't get the reorder options to work in Firefox, but it works fine in Chrome/Edge Chromium.

The Save changes button is useful, if you want to come back to the task later. Click on the remove button to discard a chapter.

The Raw Preview button displays an unformatted text version of the chapter. You can rename your eBook's title, reorder the chapters. This opens a new tab that lists the pages/selection with their page title.

Once you've added some content as chapters, click on the Edit Chapters option.
