Subscribing to FilterJoe via RSS has always been an option. Email and Twitter are now two more options.
Why did I wait so long?
Continue reading “Subscribe to FilterJoe via Email, Twitter, or RSS”
telling stories based on data
Subscribing to FilterJoe via RSS has always been an option. Email and Twitter are now two more options.
Why did I wait so long?
Continue reading “Subscribe to FilterJoe via Email, Twitter, or RSS”
One of the biggest distractions of modern life is passwords. Many web services and forums require that you set up a separate user name and password. You have to develop and maintain a system to remember it all. And you have to enter these user names and passwords many times per day.
Even the lightest of users may have a dozen or so online accounts and heavy users have hundreds. How do you keep track of all these passwords?
Continue reading “A Guide to Using Passwords Without Distraction”
With a single click, you can reformat a busy web page so that only the main content is visible. I first wrote about this in Filters for Reading on the Web, where I also discussed why extended reading on a computer monitor is so difficult.
Since that time, there has been an explosion of interest in helping people read without distraction. Apple has included a Readability button with the Safari browser. All browsers but Safari now include a full screen mode. Many web page reformatting services have come and gone.
But Readable and Readability are the two web page reformatting services which came out first, and both have withstood the test of time. Both also came out with new versions in early 2011. Here’s what you need to know about the latest versions.
Continue reading “Web Page Reformatting Services Readable and Readability”
In early 2011, there have been major changes to four out of the five browsers that dominate the browser market: Chrome, Firefox, Opera, and Internet Explorer. So it’s a great time for my third annual browser comparison, along with recommendations.
NOTE: In 2015 I posted a more current comparison of the latest browser versions, Best Browsers . . .
In last year’s browser comparison post, I noted that:
“Google’s Chrome browser was designed from the ground up to be good at running web applications, with an underlying architecture that is faster, more secure, and more stable than the competition. Chrome succeeded. The competition responded. Users have benefited.”
I also thought that Chrome deserved the “best browser” award at that time. However, the competition has since greatly improved. Though I again rank the browsers 1 through 5, the gap between #1 and #5 is narrow, as the current versions are all very good. Each browser is best for a different set of users.
Continue reading “Best Browsers 2011: Which Is the Best Browser for You?”
For years I’ve struggled to find a monitor setup that allows me to be the most productive, without causing eye fatigue or eye strain. Here’s my best answer so far:
I now use a vertical monitor with high pixel density. It helps reduce eye fatigue, clicks, and distraction.
Why?
How?
Continue reading “The Best Monitor Setup to Reduce Eye Fatigue and Distraction”
Tablets are the latest tech fad and for good reason. Compared with laptops, they’re more portable, they have longer battery life, and they’re easier to use and maintain. This makes for a superior experience for displaying a wide variety of content. I suspect that within a few years, tablets will be a general purpose computing appliance that is easier to use, maintain, and secure than traditional computers.
But are they good for distraction-free reading of the sort I talk about so much at FilterJoe? Should you spend $500 or more on a tablet for use as a dedicated reader? Or should you stick with a less expensive iPod Touch or Kindle for reading? Continue reading “Distraction-Free Reading on Tablets? Should You Buy One?”
Do you spend hours reading computer displays each day? Does this tire your eyes? Me too. So I’m on a mission to find a device on which I can read anything. Ideally, it should be:
I tried reading anything on a second generation Kindle. The e-ink screen is easy on my eyes and Kindles are great for reading novels. But the software has many shortcomings for reading other material such as PDFs or long articles on the web. I devoted considerable effort to making my Kindle overcome these shortcomings, but in the end decided to try a more flexible device lacking an E-ink display.

Enter the iPod touch, 4th generation (or iPhone 4), with double the screen resolution of prior models. Reading with the “Retina Display” is easy on my eyes and the software makes reading a breeze for a surprisingly wide range of reading material.
The iPod touch 4G works well for reading. It works so well for me that I stopped using my Kindle and sold it. Read on for details, including many tips along the way for using an iPod for reading.
Continue reading “iPod touch vs Kindle: Which is Best for Reading?”
What I care most about in a browser or any other computer tool is being able to focus on work without distraction. After all, that is what FilterJoe is all about.
In my best browsers post, Chrome 5 earned my “best browser 2010” award, thanks to speed, security, and an uncluttered interface. Since then, Chrome has released 3 more versions, with Chrome 8 released on December 2, 2010.
Is Chrome three versions’ worth of better? Or is it worse? Will Chrome be the best browser in 2011? Continue reading “Will Chrome be the Best Browser in 2011? Probably Not . . .”
Password management software is a great way to manage passwords, as I write about here, here and here. However, it is possible to manage passwords quite well without software, using what I call a “base phrase approach”. The basic idea behind this method is to pick a phrase or word. Transform it into a very strong base password, to which a few letters are added for each different account.
I have been reluctant to post this article as I continue to strongly believe that using a password manager is a much better approach for most people. But having seen a few articles recently describing how to manage passwords without a password manager, I felt the time was right to complete the series on password management.
Read on for specific, detailed examples of how to implement the base phrase approach.
Continue reading “A Base Phrase Approach to Password Management”
A year ago I wrote about how difficult it is to read text-heavy content on a computer, here. Though I recognized the virtues of E-ink, I was not enthusiastic about the Amazon Kindle as a device for reading lengthy online text due to its high expense, slow browser, and the difficulty of getting online content onto the device.

Now the price is lower, the browser is faster, and getting many forms of content onto the Kindle is easier, especially if used in conjunction with Google Reader.
Continue reading “Can You Read Anything with the Kindle? Almost . . . with Google Reader”