So at least Kindle itself is able to sort this. Pocket, however, takes a simpler approach to customization. You can choose from a variety of fonts, magnify or minimize the font size, change the line spacing and indentation, and select one of four background colors. I know that the “My Clippings” file does not contain this information, but at least when you are viewing the notes on Kindle for a particular Instapaper digest, they are clearly grouped by articles. Instapaper offers more customization features. So I wonder if there is a way to export notes in such a way that it would also have at least a name of the article to which the note relates? Ideal would be if it also had a link to the original article. So when I export highlights and notes from the Instapaper digest file to clippings.io, I cannot immediately decipher which article each note relates to. However, Clippings seem to rely solely on 'My Clippings’ file and it only contains reference to a page location in a book, nothing more. When this is for books I read on my kindle, I usually rely on clippings.io. The issue is that I am also a compulsive note taker and ofter mark those on instapaper articles too. Luckily, with automated digests the delivery works like a charm, though I also have an Instapaper recipe in Calibre and occassionally use it too. I often read articles from Instapaper on Kindle. Really pretty elegant stuff here that, I hope, shows the value proposition of many small/lightweight tools loosely coupled as opposed to some monolithic solution.Apologies in advance if this comes off as another weird specific highlight request in relation to export highlights mechanics. Si ya posee un dispositivo Kindle y está buscando leer el contenido de la web en la pantalla de E Ink, no puedo recomendar Instapaper lo suficiente. Once it sees the Kindle is plugged in, it executes this AppleScript which emails the My Clippings.txt file automatically to readwise who then imports it. The original read-it later app, Instapaper uses a very clean, text-only layout. Instapaper, the incredibly useful 'read later' service for the web, the iPhone and pretty much any e-reader, has just updated its Kindle support to make it even better. This last bit requires a good bit of AppleScript sorcery but it’s pretty easy to achieve using EventScripts.īasically, EventScripts notices when my Kindle is plugged in. Instapaper: The no-nonsense reader Platforms: Android, iOS, Kindle, Web Instapaper 2.7 for Android. Instapaper for Android provides a mobile and tablet-optimized. ![]() When I plug my Kindle into my Mac’s USB connection, the highlights are automatically sent to my Readwise account Instapaper is the simplest way to save and store articles for reading: offline, on-the-go, anytime, anywhere, perfectly formatted. A nice Kindle integration Instapaper allows me to send my unread articles to my Kindle. Thought some folks might be interested in this workflow. I then read/highlight on my Kindle paperwhite Instapaper -> Calibre -> Kindle DEVONthink Scenarios cturner October 15, 2010, 2:15pm 1. Push to Kindle from fivefilters allows me to easily push web articles to my kindle from my Mac (via Safari extension), iPhone or iPad (nice, easy to configure dedicated iOS app) I wish that I could use Instapaper for this workflow but, while you can read Instapaper articles on the Kindle pretty easily, tracking highlights doesn’t work so well. I have spent the past couple of weeks cobbling together a collection of tools that makes reading long articles on my Kindle easier as well as saves any article highlights I’ve made to Readwise. That said, I’m finding myself less inclined to wanting to read long form journalism on my iPad, especially at night in bed when I’m trying to stay away from screens or at the beach where my Kindle feels easier to read than my iPad. The service has its flaws but all in all has been useful to me in helping me to remember what I’ve read and found important. Over the past year I’ve been using a service called Readwise.io to surface highlights from books I read on my Kindle and from articles I read on my iPad using Instapaper.
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