I am only considering text-based informative pages, free of any form of "Art".
IMHO, your web text pages will be better appreciated if you bear in mind the suggestions on these pages.
Some search Engines :-
Translation :-
The Netscape Bookmarks are an HTML file; IMHO it should be possible to select a Netscape Bookmark File as an MSIE Favorite, which will be a way of using them as quasi-Favorites.
Some pestilential authors globally override your default text and background with undesirable choices of font, colour or pattern. Look for browser options, e.g. MSIE 4 View, Internet Options, General, Fonts or Accessibility.
In at least some browsers, for pages which do not prevent it, Ctrl-Mousewheel changes the font size.
Question : Is it possible to make text on a web page view or print in a different colour scheme to that selected by an author inconsiderate of its effect on one's system? For example, a page with a dark blue background and white text can come out white on white paper when printed.
Answer 1 : Look again into the options available via the various menus of your browser.
Answer 2 : Save the page as a file. Later, edit the colour settings (which should be easy), view the local file, and print. However, one then loses any images defined by relative links.
Answer 3 : Using Netscape 1.22 set up like mine was, one can seek the relevant cache file by looking in file://c:/netscape/cache/fat (obvious when one gets there). One can then edit the cache file. If one views as local the edited cached file, the images are indeed broken, but if one views the original URL, offline, one gets the edited page with images mended. Other systems may act similarly.
I assume that it will print with images; print preview looks OK. Tested, but only once.
Answer 4 : Look yet again into the options available via the various menus of your browser.
How about a program to remove all vexatious settings from a cached file - non-relative font changes, colours, etc.? :-}
Note :- There are more settings in browsers to affect the appearance of printing than are always recalled.