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Tuesday, January 8, 2013

Read Web Pages Offline



Haiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii, Today I am here with a tip for all the people who loves reading various blogs,sites and many other stuffs on the net::)) Have you ever wondered whether you can read your favourite  blogs offlone?Now don't start wondering about it because i told you about it and i am here to give you the answer for that BIG question!
The solution for this problem is an app called 'READLATERFAST'.You can save your favourite post and read those when you are free,That too offline!



I do a lot of reading in a single day. Much of it is for my writing. I'll look at various technology websites and blogs, as well as application websites and other reviews. But I also have political blogs I read, as well as sports, entertainment and I do occasionally pick up an actual book to read for fun. But there is so much content out there to read, that I know I miss a lot of good articles every single day. Sometimes I'll see something that really interests me, except I don't have time to read it right then. In some cases, I'll forget about the article, but often I'll create a little text document, then copy and paste the URL of the article. Hopefully I remember to read the text document, and that when I do, I'm still interested in the article.
Read It Later is a web service to meet just those circumstances. Instead of making a text file for every article or website you want to remember, simply add it to your Read It Later list. A new Google Chrome App called Read Later Fast has the same idea.

To use Read Later Fast, simply install it. Then when you find an article you want to read, right-click and near the bottom of the contextual menu you'll see a "Read Later" option. You'll see a little "Page Saved" alert at the top of the browser window, and you're all set. Just choose Read Later Fast from your Google Chrome start page, and you'll see that page in your Inbox. By default, clicking the name of the article in your Read Later Fast list will show you the archived page which was saved to your computer. You can also choose the Link option, which takes you back to the actual website. From here you can archive the page (which removes it from the Inbox but adds it to your Archive, so you can read it whenever you want. You can also delete it when you're finished. When a page is first added to your Read Later Fast list, you'll see that your inbox (just like email), has a red number badge, showing how many unread pages are available. When you then view the page, the article stays in your Inbox but is no longer added to your unread total.
Viewing the version of the page that was saved to your hard drive has a couple advantages. First, it can be read even when not connected to the Internet, but there is also a text-only view which strips away all the ads, graphics and extra formatting and shows you only the content of the article, which was probably what you wanted to read in the first place. It's a nice view (one that I almost wish was the default), and makes reading articles from "messy" websites a lot more fun.

                                                                   



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