read_later 2701
Amazon.com: Summer's Journey: Volume One - Losing Control eBook: Summer Daniels: Kindle Store
4 weeks ago by milo
Fortyish, newly divorced, searching and longing for something different. Something fulfilling and exciting, somewhere far outside my ordinary comfort zone.
Come with me on my journey of discovery. Explore with me. Touch, taste and feel with me.
Lots more to come following my introduction to you in this first volume of a multi-part True Romance / Erotica series.
“Perhaps I was being picky, but I really didn’t think being able to spell orgasm without being spotted a vowel was asking too much.”
Approximately 6,000 words – this first volume introduces the main characters and how they met.
This first volume of my sexual self-discovery is the mere beginning of a sensual, sultry love affair with life, and with all the joys of being a woman.
books
kindle
reading
read_later
Come with me on my journey of discovery. Explore with me. Touch, taste and feel with me.
Lots more to come following my introduction to you in this first volume of a multi-part True Romance / Erotica series.
“Perhaps I was being picky, but I really didn’t think being able to spell orgasm without being spotted a vowel was asking too much.”
Approximately 6,000 words – this first volume introduces the main characters and how they met.
This first volume of my sexual self-discovery is the mere beginning of a sensual, sultry love affair with life, and with all the joys of being a woman.
4 weeks ago by milo
Mac App Store – „Read Later - The best Client for Read It Later and Instapaper“
5 weeks ago by milo
Beschreibung
Read Later gives you access to your Read It Later account (free) or Instapaper (which requires a paid subscription membership) in a easy-to-use application.
Enjoy viewing all your read later items without logging in via a clean mac app - where your articles are just one mouse click away. The clean design offers you a fast navigation and will save you time storing and accessing articles you are planning to read.
➪ Syncs your articles with Read it Later (free) and / or Instapaper (paid subscription membership needed)
➪ Add, Archive, Edit, Move, Like or Delete your articles
➪ Customizable shortcuts to open Read Later or add new web pages
➪ Read articles in an Article View with Paper, Light and Dark styles
➪ Adjustable fonts, text sizes, line spacing, and margins in the Article View
➪ Download up to 500 Instapaper articles and up to 1000 Read It Later articles per folder
➪ Export your items to CSV or HTML
Share:
- Share via Twitter, Pinboard, Facebook, Delicious, Evernote
- Shorten article link with bit.ly or j.mp
- Send article link via email
pocket
read_later
appstore
mac
Read Later gives you access to your Read It Later account (free) or Instapaper (which requires a paid subscription membership) in a easy-to-use application.
Enjoy viewing all your read later items without logging in via a clean mac app - where your articles are just one mouse click away. The clean design offers you a fast navigation and will save you time storing and accessing articles you are planning to read.
➪ Syncs your articles with Read it Later (free) and / or Instapaper (paid subscription membership needed)
➪ Add, Archive, Edit, Move, Like or Delete your articles
➪ Customizable shortcuts to open Read Later or add new web pages
➪ Read articles in an Article View with Paper, Light and Dark styles
➪ Adjustable fonts, text sizes, line spacing, and margins in the Article View
➪ Download up to 500 Instapaper articles and up to 1000 Read It Later articles per folder
➪ Export your items to CSV or HTML
Share:
- Share via Twitter, Pinboard, Facebook, Delicious, Evernote
- Shorten article link with bit.ly or j.mp
- Send article link via email
5 weeks ago by milo
Read It Later Reborn: Pocket Saves Everything “For Later”
5 weeks ago by milo
In the past five years, reading on the web has fundamentally changed. Read It Later, the first popular service to pioneer a certain kind of “bookmarking” for web articles, is reborn today as Pocket, and it promises to change the way users think of web content to “save for later”. Most importantly, Pocket wants to address what has become the scarcest resource of web citizens: time.
Read Later
People never had time to check out all the cool stuff that happens on the Internet every day. As blogging platforms started taking off in the past decade, sometime during 2006 some people began to realize they didn’t have time to read every article that was posted online. The digital publishing revolution had already happened, but the explosion of blogging was just starting to produce high-quality, journalistic and well-informed pieces that, due to a simple scarcity of time and intuitive tools, people didn’t have time to read in their entirety. Whilst the act of “bookmarking” something on the Internet goes back to several years ago, the more focused, practical act of “saving an article for later” can actually be traced back in the form of popular consumer software to somewhere in between late 2006 and 2007.
Nate Weiner was one of the first developers (and avid web readers) to understand that the bookmarking systems in place at the time (Delicious, magnolia, or simple browser bookmarks) weren’t cutting it, from a technical and psychological perspective, for those users that just wanted to put off an article for later.
web
reading
read_later
pocket
ios
Read Later
People never had time to check out all the cool stuff that happens on the Internet every day. As blogging platforms started taking off in the past decade, sometime during 2006 some people began to realize they didn’t have time to read every article that was posted online. The digital publishing revolution had already happened, but the explosion of blogging was just starting to produce high-quality, journalistic and well-informed pieces that, due to a simple scarcity of time and intuitive tools, people didn’t have time to read in their entirety. Whilst the act of “bookmarking” something on the Internet goes back to several years ago, the more focused, practical act of “saving an article for later” can actually be traced back in the form of popular consumer software to somewhere in between late 2006 and 2007.
Nate Weiner was one of the first developers (and avid web readers) to understand that the bookmarking systems in place at the time (Delicious, magnolia, or simple browser bookmarks) weren’t cutting it, from a technical and psychological perspective, for those users that just wanted to put off an article for later.
5 weeks ago by milo
Read Later, An Instapaper Client For OS X
11 weeks ago by sociologjourno
Read Later lets you... Read later
Y’all know Instapaper, right? It’s the amazing read-later service from Marco Arment which lets you save anything your find on the web to read at your leisure on your iPhone, iPad or Kindle. Now a new, free, Mac App Store app called Read Later will let you read your articles on your Mac.
Maybe the best thing about Instapaper — apart from it’s distraction-free interface — is the fact that it is baked into just about every iOS app that deals with the web. Browsers, RSS readers and even the excellent Guardian Newsstand app will let you “read later.” And that’s great if you actually want to read later. But what if you want to use your Instapaper library as a big research center?
Enter Read Later, a three-pane app which is ostensibly about reading articles on your Mac, but is actually better suited to searching and processing your saved bookmarks. Designed like Mail, or any number of desktop RSS readers, the interface has your folders in the left pane, the article list in the centre and the article itself on the left.
Search is instantaneous, with the list changing to match your enquiry as you type, and you can do pretty much everything, from switching folders and articles to archiving and un/liking via the keyboard.
It also has a very good looking text view which will make reading very comfy in full screen mode on a MacBook Air (full screen on a 27-inch iMac shrinks the article into a tall column).
Use cases? Reading later, of course, but as Instapaper has a one-touch save from most iOS apps, it’s a great way for writers and bloggers to collect links/posts for processing later. It’s also just nice to have an archive on your desktop.
Downsides: The “Find in Article” search never seems to work, and the app doesn’t yet support services in anything but the article text. So no sending an article to Omnifocus, for example. Then again, there are a host of export options.
Don’t dally. This app is great, and free. If you have an Instapaper account you should be downloading it now.
More from Cult of Mac:‘News.me’ is a Different Kind of Social News Experience for Your iPad from Bit.ly & The New York Times Read New York Times For Free, Courtesy of Safari [Easiest Method Ever] Instapaper Gets A Major Update Safari 5.1 Released: Full Screen Mode, Gestures, Reading List And More Evernote’s New “Clearly” Chrome Extension Gives You A Clean Reading Experience Related Stories
More Confirmation: iPad 3 Will “Definitely” Have LTE 4GDevs Can Graft Real-Time Analytics Onto Their Apps With TestFlight LiveMassive Apple Air Freight Deal Could Mean iPad 3 Will Ship Even Sooner Than We ThoughtApple Releases OS X 10.7.3 Supplemental Update With Time Machine FixThe iPad 3 Will Be Like Having a 42inch HD TV In Your Hand
OS_X
instapaper
News
Read_LAter
Apps
free
Software
from google
Y’all know Instapaper, right? It’s the amazing read-later service from Marco Arment which lets you save anything your find on the web to read at your leisure on your iPhone, iPad or Kindle. Now a new, free, Mac App Store app called Read Later will let you read your articles on your Mac.
Maybe the best thing about Instapaper — apart from it’s distraction-free interface — is the fact that it is baked into just about every iOS app that deals with the web. Browsers, RSS readers and even the excellent Guardian Newsstand app will let you “read later.” And that’s great if you actually want to read later. But what if you want to use your Instapaper library as a big research center?
Enter Read Later, a three-pane app which is ostensibly about reading articles on your Mac, but is actually better suited to searching and processing your saved bookmarks. Designed like Mail, or any number of desktop RSS readers, the interface has your folders in the left pane, the article list in the centre and the article itself on the left.
Search is instantaneous, with the list changing to match your enquiry as you type, and you can do pretty much everything, from switching folders and articles to archiving and un/liking via the keyboard.
It also has a very good looking text view which will make reading very comfy in full screen mode on a MacBook Air (full screen on a 27-inch iMac shrinks the article into a tall column).
Use cases? Reading later, of course, but as Instapaper has a one-touch save from most iOS apps, it’s a great way for writers and bloggers to collect links/posts for processing later. It’s also just nice to have an archive on your desktop.
Downsides: The “Find in Article” search never seems to work, and the app doesn’t yet support services in anything but the article text. So no sending an article to Omnifocus, for example. Then again, there are a host of export options.
Don’t dally. This app is great, and free. If you have an Instapaper account you should be downloading it now.
More from Cult of Mac:‘News.me’ is a Different Kind of Social News Experience for Your iPad from Bit.ly & The New York Times Read New York Times For Free, Courtesy of Safari [Easiest Method Ever] Instapaper Gets A Major Update Safari 5.1 Released: Full Screen Mode, Gestures, Reading List And More Evernote’s New “Clearly” Chrome Extension Gives You A Clean Reading Experience Related Stories
More Confirmation: iPad 3 Will “Definitely” Have LTE 4GDevs Can Graft Real-Time Analytics Onto Their Apps With TestFlight LiveMassive Apple Air Freight Deal Could Mean iPad 3 Will Ship Even Sooner Than We ThoughtApple Releases OS X 10.7.3 Supplemental Update With Time Machine FixThe iPad 3 Will Be Like Having a 42inch HD TV In Your Hand
11 weeks ago by sociologjourno
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