One catch though is, one has to click the readability link and there is no keyboard shortcut. I have seen a Google Chrome extension that assigns a keyboard shortcut to readability, and since Opera is my browser of choice, came up with a solution for Opera.
- Go to http://lab.arc90.com/experiments/readability/ and select your preferred style.
- Now, instead of dragging the bookmarklet to your toolbar, right click it and select "Copy Link Address".
- Go to the Speed Dial page in Opera, and assign one of the speed dial pages (1-9) with the link you copied.
- Now, you can view any page with Readability by pressing Ctrl-1 for example if you have assigned the Readability for the first SpeedDial page.
Also see http://www.ustunozgur.com/2010/02/opera-and-vi-style-navigation-scrolling.html for more reading tips within Opera.
Alternative Method:
The method above, though simple forces you to sacrifice a speeddial just for Readability. Also, one can't assign an alternative keyboard shortcut, like Ctrl-r to his liking. An alternative approach is to assign a shortcut in Opera that goes to the Readability bookmarklet:
- Copy the Readability bookmarklets url to clipboard as above.
- Go to Tools-Preferences.
- Go to Advanced-Shortcuts.
- Keyboard setup, Edit.
- Click on Application.
- Click New, for the shortcut key, Enter r Ctrl if you want Ctrl-r for readability.
- For the action, enter Go to page," (with only opening quote), then paste the url and close the quote " .
- Now, Ctrl-r is assigned to reload by default, search for r ctrl and remove that assignment in the shortcuts list.
- Pressing Ctrl-r on any page will format it using Readability now. Obviously, this method works for any bookmarklet, for example, Instapaper.
3 comments:
Good tricks, thank you!
Excellent! Thank you!
This is a really useful tip, thank you...
Post a Comment