New idea for a web browser/PIM tool: vertical-only view browser. Say, something restricted to 600px in width. Because the Web is vertical.

Having this design restriction also provokes several interesting decisions:

• One element at a time is an optimal pace. Narrow view would not work well with multiple elements alongside each other. And maybe that’s for good?

• Views can be easily reordered and tiled, utilizing the horizontal dimensions of most modern screens. Imagine a browser that can be open five times on one screen without any penalties to comprehension!

• Page content needs to be ruthlessly optimized and reordered. Something like Readability.js (I keep getting back to it, all the time) but also for non-article pages?

• Can be used as a cheap GUI—still compatible with the Web, but easy to spin up in a separate window and manage with OS’ primitives.

@aartaka I take tbe mozilla "readability" approach in @agregore

It also listens to the user preferences in width and color scheme / font which gets set browser wide.

Readability isn't ideal though and sometimes misses content. In my experience.

Been thinking of making my own based on this web scraper tool I made recently.

@mauve yes, Readability is imperfect due to its focus on plain long form articles. Needs remixing if we’re to do something more generic with it.

There is a niche for a “website cleanup” scraper / simplifier, and I keep stumbling into it. Maybe make a C library doing HTML simplification? 🤔

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@aartaka I'm currently doing everything in JS with the built in DOMParser API. 😅

I think if I come up with a decent algo it'd be easy enough to parse to other formats.

At one point I had code to convert from HTML to markdown for a TUI browser which was silly and fun. 😸

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@mauve yes, making a portable algorithm / recipe for page debloating is the priority in that. Implementations come second.

cf. aartaka.me/explanations.html

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