A couple of weeks ago, I wrote about using EWW to avoid paywalls and my experiments to see if it really worked. As I reported, it did in a surprising number of cases. But as I also wrote, I’m not that interested in avoiding paywalls so I didn’t expect to get much out of the experiment other than satisfying my idle curiosity.
It turns out though that I discovered using EWW could be very restful. As I wrote in that last post,
The other thing I learned is that reading content with EWW can be a very restful experience. No ads, no blinkenlights, and sometimes, no paywall either. I didn’t try running EWW with eww-readable but that would probably make the experience even more restful.
My normal procedure is to read my feeds with Elfeed—the world’s best RSS reader—and to display the original Web page in the same buffer with elfeed-webkit. That gives me a browser like view of the page. The problem is, my ad blocker doesn’t work with elfeed-webkit so I get all the trash and abuse one gets with a default page load1.
During my experiment I discovered that calling EWW when a site gets out of control is an excellent solution. The latest version of elfeed makes this easy so if I site becomes too obnoxious, I simply switch to EWW and invoke eww-readable with R to provide a quiet and restful wall of text (complete with the accompanying pictures).
It’s amazing how much junk we just take for granted when all we want to do is read an article or post. EWW takes away a lot of the sting. No, it’s still not going to replace the browser but it’s an excellent companion to it.
Footnotes:
John Gruber has an excellent screed on one part of this default behavior. There are plenty of others.