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One of my most-used Chrome browser extensions is Clearly. You install it and it puts a little button at the top of your browser window.
Then, when you come across a page like this:
,
you click this little reading lamp:

and you instantly get this:

I like it better than ad blockers because a) sometimes I do want to see ads, but get them out of the way for serious reading, b) as far as I know, the web page still gets an ad-hit for my click, and c) Clearly, besides removing extraneous crap from the page, renders the main content in a font size and line width I can specify for my own reading ease.
ETA: Oh, and a page rendered in Clearly usually doesn't display comments--believe me, a huge boon when reading anything about bicycling in any local press anywhere.
Then, when you come across a page like this:

you click this little reading lamp:

and you instantly get this:

I like it better than ad blockers because a) sometimes I do want to see ads, but get them out of the way for serious reading, b) as far as I know, the web page still gets an ad-hit for my click, and c) Clearly, besides removing extraneous crap from the page, renders the main content in a font size and line width I can specify for my own reading ease.
ETA: Oh, and a page rendered in Clearly usually doesn't display comments--believe me, a huge boon when reading anything about bicycling in any local press anywhere.
(no subject)
27/6/13 19:50 (UTC)(no subject)
27/6/13 20:11 (UTC)(no subject)
27/6/13 23:13 (UTC)(no subject)
27/6/13 23:18 (UTC)(no subject)
27/6/13 23:21 (UTC)Thanks, I've been using adblock but it's sometimes too dramatic and if a page layout is the problem it doesn't help in that regard.
(no subject)
27/6/13 23:30 (UTC)(no subject)
27/6/13 23:30 (UTC)(no subject)
28/6/13 00:25 (UTC)(no subject)
28/6/13 00:26 (UTC)(no subject)
28/6/13 18:49 (UTC)I love comics and even the comics community, most of the time-- but whenever I get a close-up look at the craziness of its fandom and the genuine fear that publishers seem to have of NOT trying to cater to it, it's really pretty damn depressing. I remember when comics and superheroes were a MASS medium and not a key club for emotionally-stunted man-children.
(no subject)
28/6/13 20:09 (UTC)I don't know if women bike bloggers have to put up with rape threats--the ones I've followed have pretty civil blog environments, but I wouldn't rule it out. It shocks the hell out of me that your female colleagues do. Note that I don't say "surprises". Just "shocks."
I've noticed a gratifying decline in the general male-privilege odor in the bike blogosphere over the four years of my involvement, but when bike-related topics hit mainstream sources like the local newspaper, the knee-jerk political reactionaries come out in force. I wonder if there's a comics-world equivalent to "Scofflaw cyclists need to pay road taxes like the rest of us".
The two worlds--bikes and comics--have a somewhat "fringe" element in common, but I'm guessing that it plays out very differently in each.
As to the relationship between being a pro writer and the intellect of those subsidizing your craft: well, I suspect the ratio of smart reviews and idiotic comments never really changes, even though the bulk quantity goes up as you get a wider audience.