Offline Explorer Enterprise Guide

To understand the power, let's walk through a realistic project: Mirroring a 5,000-page internal training wiki that requires a login.

Step 1: Installation and Initial Tuning Download the installer (approx. 35 MB—remarkably small for its power). During installation, choose the "Enterprise" components, including the Project Manager and the Command Line Interface (CLI). Set the global cache folder to a fast SSD, and allocate at least 10 GB of space.

Step 2: Creating the Project

Step 3: Configuring Depth and Filters Under Download Options:

Step 4: Scheduling & Advanced Rules

Step 5: Execution and Local Browsing Click Download. OEE will open a project window showing live statistics: bytes downloaded, errors, skipped links, and current speed. Once complete, navigate to the project folder (e.g., C:\OEE Projects\Training Wiki). Double-click index.html. You are now browsing the entire training wiki offline, with all search and internal links functioning.


After download, OEE runs a "Link Conversion" engine. You have three options: Offline Explorer Enterprise


Out of respect for web servers (and to avoid getting your IP banned), OEE allows you to:

OEE does not send usage statistics, downloaded URLs, or cached pages to MetaProducts. The entire processing engine runs locally. This is a critical feature for defense contractors and legal firms where data exfiltration is a threat concern. To understand the power, let's walk through a

For IT administrators, OEE acts as a robust FTP client. You can download entire FTP directories, preserving timestamps and file attributes. Furthermore, the "Local to Local" or "Site to Local" sync mode allows you to maintain an exact replica of a remote server as a disaster recovery backup.

The UI looks like it came from Windows XP. It is functional, logical, and fast, but modern users accustomed to ribbon interfaces or dark mode may find it spartan. Step 3: Configuring Depth and Filters Under Download