Reading Workflow Defragmentation

For too long, my reading and research have been scattered across too many platforms. RSS feeds from Reeder, then articles are saved in GoodLinks, ebooks in Amazon Kindle and Apple Books, PDFs floating in cloud storage, or Kindle and Apple Books. Each tool had its strengths, but juggling them all meant highlights and notes got lost, insights disconnected, and reading turned into an endless backlog instead of a fluid process. It was time for defrag, and past time to streamline everything into a single, efficient pipeline where information flows effortlessly from reading to annotation to long-term knowledge storage.

Enter Readwise Reader, the missing link that consolidates everything. Now, RSS articles, PDFs, and even EPUBs live in one place, ready for deep reading, highlighting, and seamless syncing to my Denbow Operating System. No more scattered notes, no more “I’ll get to this later” purgatory—everything I engage with is processed, annotated, and automatically archived where it belongs. GoodLinks remains my inbox for reference storage, but Readwise Reader is where reading happens, and the DenbowOS is where knowledge lives.

The result is a frictionless reading workflow that eliminates redundancy and maximizes retention. Instead of bouncing between half a dozen apps, I save, read, highlight and annotate in a structured flow, ensuring nothing gets lost in the shuffle. My highlights sync automatically, my PDFs are searchable, and my reading backlog finally feels manageable. The days of reading fragmentation are over.

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