![]() On web, so long as you have open before you go offline, Reader will continue to work and any changes you make (e.g. Reader works offline on both web and mobile. This means that if you subscribe while Reader is in beta, you'll get lifetime access for $7.99/month (billed annually) as part of our current Readwise Full plan. Regardless, we don't intend to increase pricing on existing full subscribers at that time. Pricing is really hard and complex so we candidly haven't figured out the exact plans yet, but we hope to justify a slightly higher price point than Readwise could before Reader. Once Reader officially exits beta, we intend to reprice Readwise/Reader for new subscribers thereafter. ![]() We're not going anywhere, but it's a fair question considering the many startups that raised venture capital during the peak markets of 2020/2021 and are now zombies. We're a sustainable company on a team of 13 (and growing) with a long-term mission of improving the practice of reading through software by an order of magnitude. We've been working on Readwise since 2017 (5+ years!) and in 2018 we decided to fund the business through consumer software-as-a-service rather than raising venture capital (more here: Why We're Bootstrapping Readwise). What is the business model of Readwise? If I start using Reader, how do I know you won't disappear on me? Over time, the vision is to create a unified experience between Readwise and Reader within Reader. Every highlight you make in Reader instantly syncs with Readwise and then from Readwise to your note-taking apps. Right now, you can think of Reader as another reading app that integrates with Readwise (albeit seamlessly because they share a database). What's the relationship between Reader and Readwise? Are they automatically connected? ![]() If you're not redirected automatically, make sure you're logged into Readwise on any browser you're using with Reader. Reader uses your Readwise account for authentication. Note that Reader and Readwise use the same account and authentication. (On mobile, you can find these sections by tapping the Views icon in the bottom navigation bar.)Īlternatively, you can also watch our community manager Erin's short walkthrough video to get up and running with Reader as quickly as possible: How do I find the Reader web app in my browser? For example, if you read PDFs, click on the PDF section and you'll see instructions in the right sidebar for how to upload those files. From there, we recommend you navigate to different sections of the app based on the type of content you read. The best way to get started using Reader is to navigate to and read the Getting Started with Reader article inserted into your Library by default. Reader is a cross-platform reading application which includes a web app ( ), mobile apps for iOS and Android, and browser extensions for Chrome, Chromium-based browsers (Edge, Brave, Arc, etc), Firefox, and Safari. On mobile: Tap the "." icon in the lower right, tap the Ghostreader icon, and input a specific question such as "How do I save articles to Reader on iOS?"īasics □ How do I get started with Reader?.On web: Hit Shift + G to invoke Ghostreader at the document-level, select "Ask the document question", and input a specific question such as "How do I upload an OPML file?" or "Where do I find the Safari extension?" Nine times out of ten it should return what you're looking for!.You can ask this FAQ your question using Ghostreader and likely find the answer you're looking for. Ghostreader enables you to define terms, look up encyclopedia entries, simplify complex language, and much more, but one of its most powerful functions is asking a document a question. One of the coolest features of Reader is an AI reading assistant called Ghostreader (based on GPT-3). Updated mobile directions for customizing appearance.Updated instructions for adding document notes to include mobile and browser extension.Various punctuation, semantics, and phrasing tweaks.Updated TTS section to reflect new functionality (start midway through document, headphone gestures, etc).Added information about PDF color inverting and how to disable it.Added instructions for switching to text view on PDFs. ![]() Added instructions for customizing keyboard shortcuts.Updated instructions for saving Twitter threads.Added more context for a variety of actions on mobile.Added browser extension hot key ( alt+R).Updated info about auto-highlighting feature.Explained link between Reader docs and Readwise highlights.Explained limitations of Kindle/Google/etc books.
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