The ASP.NET DataViews are powerful tools when coupled with a DataSource. But you can skip the DataSource and use the DataViews to handle displaying and updating any collection of objects you want, ...
You might be on the right track with #1. Then LinqDataSource.Inserted event uses the LinqDataSourceStatusEventArgs class and it has a Result Property. You should be able to cast it (to its table name) ...
In theory, PreviousPage lets you access data on the page the user just requested. In practice it doesn't work if you're also using Master Pages unless you understand ASP.NET naming containers.
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