I'll definitely be looking into this to replace Evernote for my current clipping archival system.
Check it out at http://jaytaylor.com/notes
I've been very dissatisfied with the absolutely terrible bastardized HTML served up by the Evernote API for web clippings, and this looks it could become a fantastic replacement!
I've written scrapers to do exactly that for a few works, but they're one-offs that get their metadata (e.g. chapter titles) from explicit provided data-structures rather than from the site itself. A fully-general solution to this would be amazing.
Side-note: webcomic authors have realized that there's a market for physical book-prints of their work, but they're ignoring the fact that people like me would gladly buy a digital version of the same book from the Kindle or iBooks store—even though we can read the individual pages online. People are willing to pay for convenience!
† And speaking of reflowed mobile layouts, I wish every webcomic reflowed the way Dinosaur Comics does (http://qwantz.com/index.php?mobile=1). It wouldn't work for those special "frame-boundary-breaking" art techniques, but most comics don't even use those.
https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/send-to-kindle-for...
[0]: http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2016/08/11/magazine/isis-...
I was just a bit disappointed when I went through the commit log, as it's not very descriptive. Here is a great article [1] on writing good commit messages.
Presumably it clips just the article and not all the textual content on a page?
I've long had an idea for an ePub app that will take email newsletters and compile them into something like a weekly ePub. I'm not a dev, though. I don't suppose there's any scope for this plugin to eventually work with non-browser content, is there?
ePub text and images can be reflowed to fit a smaller/larger screen, it is not proprietary, file sizes are smaller, and is overall an ideal format for ebooks.
If you are interested in automating this on a regular basis (perhaps to read the morning's news / blogs) I recommend Calibre, it is an amazing free (speech & beer) ebook management system that has this baked in.
Here is the relevant manual section: https://manual.calibre-ebook.com/news.html
[Edit: formating and removed parenthetical within parenthetical]
http://venturebeat.com/2016/03/08/google-docs-now-lets-you-e...
Luckily my kobo ebook reader has pocket integration though :)