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Reading offline in batch mode (garage-coding.com)
47 points by lelf on Dec 31, 2015 | hide | past | favorite | 6 comments


One of my friends use Pocket (https://getpocket.com/) for this purpose. Firefox actually has Pocket built into the browser, which actually makes it rather convenient. I'm not sure if they have a note-taking/summary feature, though.

I've never really used it because by the time I had found out about it, I had already built something similar in the form of a webapp using Parse.


I recommend taking a look at XMLStarlet [1] (mentioned in the article as a dependency of the author's Bash library) -- it is a nice tool for manipulating XML content from the command line.

[1] http://xmlstar.sourceforge.net/doc/xmlstarlet.txt


I'm wondering what the difference between this idea and instapaper is? (I don't use instapaper, but from what I've read about it I thought this is what it did?)


I have a different approach, albeit much simpler: I print stuff to PDF that I want to read later, and keep a massive, growing PDF archive that I can search with normal tools, etc. Sure, it doesn't capture all the javascript goodness .. but for most of the stuff I want to read, having PDF offline is great. I'm sort of surprised its not a more common practice, to be honest ..


PDF's lack of "reflow" (reformatting of paragraphs whenever the text size or the window size changes) is why I prefer "HTML" to PDF.


I have Instapaper email 20 articles to my Kindle when it has enough new ones, I guess one could make something to download that file, or the export account file from Instapaper and processes those links, to be read by any ebook software.




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