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I use Safari and I almost always click/tap the reader view icon as soon as the page loads. This:

1) Shows the text even if a modal has already tried to obscure it.

2) Ensures a legible font and contrast.

3) Undoes stupid scroll jacking. Yay, the text scrolls smoothly again.

4) Fixes the scroll bar so that it provides an accurate indication of how far through the page I've read, since the non-text crap I don't care about isn't part of the view now.

5) Allows me to copy text w/o worrying about anything else getting inserted to the clipboard.

6) Doesn't disclose to the site how far I've scrolled, which is none of their business.

And probably other good things I'm forgetting. Tapping the reader view icon as soon as the page loads has become habitual.

I obviously run an ad blocker as well.

This is in both iOS and macOS. Reader view FTW. It's the next best thing to disabling Javascript entirely.

Chrome and Firefox should include an as good reader view built in.



What do you call that giant banner that drops down on Medium (and other sites) every time I accidentally scroll up a pixel? I hate that thing.


I call it the nav teabag.


Naming things is hard, but you've captured the essence of it really nicely.


Perfect.


It's the header and it's super frustrating when that happens.


Firefox has one.


I use the safari reader view mode as well. It is decent, but the black/grey setting with white text still looks a bit off.

I prefer the Evernote 'simplified article' mode through safari or chrome extentions. It provides a simplified article, background colour similar to HN, and enables highlighting and brief comments.

That being said, the safari one works fine. I use it for 99% of articles, and on the 1% I go back to Evernote if I want to save the article, make a couple of highlights, or leave a comment.


With many sites you can just hit Esc before the page finishes loading and you avoid all the crappy ad pop-up scripts / "please turn off your ad blocker" messages.


Great. Now I can have a free reaction time test everytime I visit a news outlet. /s


Some apps on iOS have started to integrate the ability to drop directly into the reader view (Tweetbot is the one I use on a regular basis).


Mind me asking what ad blocker you use on iOS?


1Blocker. I'm using it on macOS too.


Works well if you're using the web to do... reading.


Which is exactly what the web was built for.


So why not use lynx?


Because many "smart" developers like to make their pages require JavaScript to display text-only articles...


Well I'm not sure if many do. Most websites that have modals load fine without JS.




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