Tldr this

  1. TLDR This
  2. TLDR This: AI Article Summarizer That Extracts Key Information Just One Click
  3. Future Tools
  4. Wikipedia:Too long; didn't read
  5. What Does “TLDR” Mean, and How Do You Use It?


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TLDR This

100% Automatic Article Summarization with just a click In the sheer amount of information that bombards Internet users from all sides, hardly anyone wants to devote their valuable time to reading long texts. TLDR This's clever AI analyzes any piece of text and summarizes it automatically, in a way that makes it easy for you to read, understand and act on.

TLDR This: AI Article Summarizer That Extracts Key Information Just One Click

TLDR This is an online AI article summarization tool created by Malcolm Scovil that helps users extract key information from any article. It summarizes important information from massive amounts of information and helps users free themselves from information overload. TLDR This compresses long articles into concise and easy-to-understand content on the basis of retaining the meaning of the original text, helping users reduce reading time and focus on more valuable things. TLDR This also provides a browser plug-in, users can use the web version or download the plug-in. Price: Starting Free Tag: AI Article Summarizer Developer(s): Malcolm Scovil Users: 494K • Automatic article summarization: TLDR This can help users extract key information from long articles • Support to extract a variety of data information: TLDR This can not only extract key information of articles, but also extract author and date information from news articles and blog articles • Ad-free reading: TLDR This eliminates ads, pop-ups, and other online distractions to provide users with a great reading environment • Enter the TLDR This website , click “Sign up” in the upper right corner • Enter email and other information, click “GET STARTED” • Check your mailbox to see if you have received the verification link from TLDR This, if not, please click “RESEND” • Click the verification link, then you can get a TLDR This account and complete the login Plan Free Starter Professional Business Plan $0/month $4.99/mon...

Future Tools

TLDR This is a tool that helps users summarize any piece of text into concise, easy-to-digest content. It provides advanced human-like summaries, automated article summarization with a click, distraction and ad-free reading, metadata extraction, and clickbait filtering. It has a paraphrasing tool to rewrite content in a different style and voice, and browser extensions to summarize webpages with a click. Note: Matt's picks are tools that Matt Wolfe has personally reviewed in depth and found it to be either best in class or groundbreaking. This does not mean that there aren't better tools available or that the alternatives are worse. It means that either Matt hasn't reviewed the other tools yet or that this was his favorite among similar tools.

Wikipedia:Too long; didn't read

• This page in a nutshell: Be concise. “ The present letter is a very long one, simply because I had no leisure to make it shorter. ” — Too long; didn't read (abbreviated TL;DR and tl;dr) is a shorthand notation added by an editor indicating that a passage appears too long to invest the time to digest it. The tl;dr label is often used to point out excessive verbosity or to signify the presence of and location of a short summary in case the reader doesn't want to take the time to read the entire detail, i.e. the article is too long and won't otherwise be read. This essay examines tl;dr as used in Wikipedia discussions, offering insight into the cause of excessive length, suggestions on how to reduce it, and a reminder to always exercise civility with other editors. Reasons for length Many people edit Wikipedia because they enjoy writing; however, that passion can result in overlong Also writers can incorrectly believe that long sentences and big words make that writer appear learned. Some policies and procedures can encourage overlong prose due to imposing arbitrary limits. The A trusted While bloated composition may reflect the emotions of an editor, it should be noted that some people are constitutionally A further option for both readers and writers is to structure the writing so it can be Internal policy discussions on talk pages can often become long-winded, too, usually for two reasons: because of the detailed nature of • ^ a b The Provincial Letters. Translated by . ...

What Does “TLDR” Mean, and How Do You Use It?

Too Long; Didn’t Read TLDR (or TL;DR) is a common internet acronym for “Too Long; Didn’t Read.” At face value, the phrase seems pretty easy to understand. But words and phrases can change depending on their context, and TLDR is no exception. In its simplest form, TLDR is used to express that a piece of digital text (an article, email, etc.) is too long to be worth reading. A lone “TLDR?” without any explanation could be an intentionally rude or funny comment. In most cases, though, it’s just a witty acknowledgment that a small chunk of text is easier to digest than a large wall of text. That said, you’ll rarely see a lone “TLDR” in the comments for a web article (or anywhere, really). People tend to accompany their TLDR with a summary of what’s being discussed. At the bottom of a lengthy article on football, for example, you might find a comment that says “TLDR: the Patriots will win the next Super Bowl.” Along this same line, writers sometimes include a TLDR at the top or bottom of their web article, email, or text message. This is meant to be a summary of what the author is saying, and it’s a disclaimer that the details of a long text may not be worth every reader’s time. A ten-paragraph product review for a crappy laptop, for example, could simply start with “TLDR: this laptop sucks.” That’s the quick summary, and you can read further for details. More Internet Phrases Internet Slang Networking TLDR Dates Back to the Early 2000s Like most internet slang, we don’t really...