Why?
Not sure what exists in the commercial world (though there are now a few flash carts most are more concerned with LSDJ and playing games rather than dumping them). Going into electronics there are some options for people that can swing a soldering iron
http://reinerziegler.de/readplus.htm#Home made programming systems is a great link, elsewhere I have seen things aimed at more common programmable chips/devices. http://hackaday.com/2013/05/17/reading-game-boy-carts-with-i2c/ would be one of them.
Bootlegs are one thing but are you sure you have undumped games? As you want saves as well that matters little (one usually does the other) but the GB/GBC world was pretty well sorted. That said dumped and dumped and still readily available on the internet are two different things, doubly so when it comes to non English, non Japanese games.
There is probably a simpler method but I'd desolder the ROM, solder it on those all-in-one chip programmers and save it on my computer.
do you have a picture of it?You could use a transferer II but those are hard to come by and you need legacy hardware aka a parallel port and windows 98
do you have a picture of it?
parallel port and 98 is not really a problemo
The upcoming Retron 5 console also handles save file dumping and restoring, I don't know about ROMs though.
if i want to dump GBC roms and saves from cartridges in 2014 what is the best option for me?
There is probably a simpler method but I'd desolder the ROM, solder it on those all-in-one chip programmers and save it on my computer.
Are you serious? Not everybody has a reflow oven at home. Good luck unsoldering SMD chips with a soldering iron.You can solder the ROM chip back to the cartridge. You can even put a socket in it's place and have a removable Flash chip instead of an SMD ROM
You can do it with a soldering iron if you have not Shrek-like handsAre you serious? Not everybody has a reflow oven at home. Good luck unsoldering SMD chips with a soldering iron.