It's a very very small boat with only nerds in it.
Please direct me to a common reading experience that does not happen on a computer screen that does not use pagination.
FWIW, your G2 is not running the Chrome browser. There is almost no relation between Chrome browser and the Android browser, save WebKit. This is puzzling, but true. And unfortunately, the Android browser just isn't up…
I don't know how to begin to think about knowing how to answer this question. :)
Go to "layout" and try something like the Overview skin. Is that more what you're looking for?
Cool. Consider it considered. :)
Bookmarking a page should work. If it isn't, that's a bug. You can bookmark sections and articles quite Well. It's a little hairy if the article gets a little old, but a solution is in the works.
It's a possibility.
I can't tell you specifics, other than that Skimmer has longer sessions per visit than the rest of the site, and more page views per user.
In the part of the past where books were scrolls, almost nobody could read, and most of what was written was data. Interestingly, relatively soon after the arrival of paginated books, public reading becomes commonplace.…
Andre Behrens, creator of the app here. My inbox has been flooded over the years with effusive messages about how much people like the way this works. The only people I've ever seen complain about usability are on…
Hi, Andre Behrens, creator of the app. I would argue it is the web itself that is broken. At the very least, it's an infinite web, and there's room for an awful lot of stuff in there, even the parts you don't like or…
I haven't looked into this, but it's definitely a possibility, provided the events are sane.
Hi! Andre Behrens, creator of the app here. You can't scroll because I happen to think scrolling for reading is broken. Scrolling is a mechanism for micro-managing the position of content at a pixel level. As a creative…
I think one can safely assume that any article containing the phrase "could kill x by changing only y" is worthless drivel. The author has hit correctly on the fundamental difference between the service, but veers into…
It's a very very small boat with only nerds in it.
Please direct me to a common reading experience that does not happen on a computer screen that does not use pagination.
FWIW, your G2 is not running the Chrome browser. There is almost no relation between Chrome browser and the Android browser, save WebKit. This is puzzling, but true. And unfortunately, the Android browser just isn't up…
I don't know how to begin to think about knowing how to answer this question. :)
Go to "layout" and try something like the Overview skin. Is that more what you're looking for?
Cool. Consider it considered. :)
Bookmarking a page should work. If it isn't, that's a bug. You can bookmark sections and articles quite Well. It's a little hairy if the article gets a little old, but a solution is in the works.
It's a possibility.
I can't tell you specifics, other than that Skimmer has longer sessions per visit than the rest of the site, and more page views per user.
In the part of the past where books were scrolls, almost nobody could read, and most of what was written was data. Interestingly, relatively soon after the arrival of paginated books, public reading becomes commonplace.…
Andre Behrens, creator of the app here. My inbox has been flooded over the years with effusive messages about how much people like the way this works. The only people I've ever seen complain about usability are on…
Hi, Andre Behrens, creator of the app. I would argue it is the web itself that is broken. At the very least, it's an infinite web, and there's room for an awful lot of stuff in there, even the parts you don't like or…
I haven't looked into this, but it's definitely a possibility, provided the events are sane.
Hi! Andre Behrens, creator of the app here. You can't scroll because I happen to think scrolling for reading is broken. Scrolling is a mechanism for micro-managing the position of content at a pixel level. As a creative…
I think one can safely assume that any article containing the phrase "could kill x by changing only y" is worthless drivel. The author has hit correctly on the fundamental difference between the service, but veers into…