I've been slowly migrating away from reading online to offline. Started a few years ago with a reMarkable tablet, then an Onyx Boox for colored papers. But newsletters always fell off my radar. There's just too much going on in my inbox.
So I built a tool that takes any RSS feed (Substack, Ghost, etc.) and formats it as a printable newspaper.
Tech: Single HTML file, vanilla JS, no backend. Fetches feeds via CORS proxy (Cloudflare Worker). Renders into a 3-column A4 layout.
I don't own a printer, though, haha. I just send the PDF to my reMarkable. But I'm curious if there's interest in getting a personalized newspaper like this actually delivered to your door.
Would love feedback on the layout, and curious how others handle the "too many newsletters" problem.
alexpls•1w ago
I have a Kindle - something I'd find valuable would be having a digest of "Today's top stories" sent to my kindle's email address as an epub so I can check it out each day. But on Kindle, I think the 3 column layout would be too narrow to read - it makes sense on A4, but not smaller. How do you do your daily sync to ReMarkable?
btw, it looks like if I enter a direct link to an RSS feed it doesn't work (e.g. when testing it for my site, https://alexplescan.com/index.xml results in a blank page, but https://alexplescan.com works well)
> curious how others handle the "too many newsletters" problem
I like to have everything funnelled into my RSS reader, pick a few things that sound interesting each day, and archive the rest. For the getting everything into RSS part, I'm building https://mailgrip.io to help (it gets email newsletters into RSS feeds).
luskira•1w ago
My daily sync is very manual at the moment, i use analogreader, generate pdf then drag it to remarkable on the mac app haha.
I can def take a look at Kindle screens and build alternate layouts for it!