
Whether due to failing eyesight or website clutter, some websites can be difficult to read. If you find yourself in that situation, here are some tools and methods for making a site easier to read. Some of these tools work by stripping away extraneous material, others make the text of a site larger, and some do a combination of the two.
1. Magnify the Text, With Either Your Hardware or a Browser Extension
The most obvious way to make a site easier to read is to magnify the text on the site. One way to do this in Windows is by holding down the CTRL keying, and then rotating your mouse wheel. You need to do this for any site where you want a larger font. For a more permanent solution, across all sites, you can try a browser extension, like No Squint for Firefox, or Zoomy for Chrome.
Tools:
2. Reformat the Page with a Bookmarklet
A bookmarklet is a bookmark that, instead of loading a web site, runs some javascript. A few competing services offer bookmarklets that will reformat pages for you. Place the bookmarklet on your bookmarks bar, click on it, and a site will be reformatted, with ads and extraneous text removed, margins altered, and fonts made more readable. We love Readability, which we use to send formatted pages right into Evernote with one click, but there are a few other choices out there.
Tools:
3. Reformat the Page With a Browser Extension
If you don’t want to mess with a javascript bookmarklet, you can achieve the same results by using one of a few browser extensions. We’ve previously professed our love for iReader, an extension for Firefox and Chrome. iReader installs a button in your browser’s address bar that appears when you are on an article-style page of a website. When you click this button, iReader strips out all of the ads and other extraneous layout elements of the web page, re-displaying it in a lightbox-style overlay that is incredibly easy to read. iReader also presents additional interaction buttons in the overlay. These buttons give you the option to tweet about the page, send it to Facebook, remove images completely, change the background opacity, and more.
If you’re a Readability or TidyRead fan, and don’t want to install one of the bookmarklets mentioned above, you can install a browser extension instead.
Tool:
- iReader (Chrome or Firefox)
- Readability (Firefox)
- Readability Redux (Chrome)
- TidyRead (Chrome or Firefox)
4. Selectively Remove Objects or Selections from a Page
There are some situations where you don’t want to reformat an entire page, but only hide objects that are interfering with your ability to enjoy the page. Nuke Everything Enhanced is a Firefox add-on that allows you hide almost anything on a page via a context menu that allows you to select “Remove Object” or “Remove Selection.” You also can select text or an object, and choose “Remove everything else” from the context menu. This leaves behind only your selection. This is especially handy when you only want to print part of a page.
Tool
5. Use Safari Reader
If you like using Safari, Apple’s web browser, then you don’t need to bother with any of the above-mentioned tools. As of Safari 5, Safari comes with the built-in ability to make sites more readable. This works much the same way that a tool like Readability works. After a page loads, click the “Reader” button in the address bar, and the page will be formatted and displayed in a lightbox-style overlay.
Tool:
- Safari browser
Do you have any tools to suggest, that you use to make sites easier to read?




Internet Explorer is Now Losing the Browser Wars? Magic 8-Ball Says: Doubtful
Internet Explorer has been slowly but steadily losing ground in the “browser wars” since the invention of that little hot little vulpine browser, Firefox. Google Chrome shook up the market even more and is continuing what’s considered to be a fast upward climb. Safari is Safari, and Opera is largely underestimated.
In the article I read about IE’s plummet, on Mashable, the tone was very much in the negative for Internet Explorer, citing phrases such as “to little, to late” and “Hail Mary” in reference to the coming improvements of IE9. Now, I am no fan of Internet Explorer (my web-designer-self hates it with a furious feral fire), and no disrespect intended to the knowledgeable minds over at Mashable, but I think a little bit of perspective may be called for.
Yes, IE has finally hit a downward slide (thank you, powers that be!) — but even with the European ruling that dropped IE from Microsoft Windows installations, and the rise of Google Chrome, Internet Explorer still holds 49.87% of the browser market (as stated in the Mashable article). Another unfortunate truth is that a good percentage of that percentage still uses IE6. The fact that anyone is still using that piece of crap is proof positive that people aren’t as far advanced into the world of technology as we might have hoped. But I digress…
The point I am making here is that 49.87%, while still a hefty drop for IE when compared to the gains of other browsers, is still the largest segment of the market by nearly 20%. Internet Explorer 9 may be a bit late, but it is still going to compete soundly with the other browsers out there. IE9 may not win back Microsoft’s haters (count me in that batch), but it will win back some people — and it will keep even more. If Internet Explorer is going anywhere, I don’t think it will be anytime soon.
What do you think?