new work coming out soon!
Looking forward to that!
Taking my health into my future, staying focused, busy, and fulfilled.
Today we’re launching an official Instapaper extension for Firefox!
We’ve been getting a lot of requests from Firefox users to build an extension to match the ones we offer for Chrome, Opera and Safari. Now, we’re happy to roll out the same great saving features for Firefox.
To install the new Firefox extension, open www.instapaper.com/save on Firefox or go to Mozilla’s Add-on page for Instapaper.
Like our other browser extensions, when you find an article or video you want to save, just tap or click once to save it to Instapaper. Other convenient features include:
A keyboard shortcut: A Ctrl+shift+S keyboard shortcut to save the article you’re currently viewing.
A right-click menu option: To save the current page–or any link on the current page–we added an “Instapaper” option to the right-click menu.
More Instapaper save buttons: Now you can “Save to Instapaper” directly from Twitter and Hacker News. Alongside each tweet containing a URL or a Hacker News post, you’ll now see an inline Instapaper save button.
Saving directly to folders: Once your save is confirmed, click the folder icon on the save overlay to direct the article right into one of your folders.
Toggle options: The keyboard shortcut and inline saving options can be toggled on/off.


If you’ve got any questions or feedback, just let us know via support@help.instapaper.com or @InstapaperHelp on Twitter.
– Instapaper Team
Great App
Follow @johngreenwritesbooks on Instagram to keep up with John.
Author John Green (@johngreenwritesbooks) has been writing stories since he was a kid — but knows there’s still room to grow. “Writing isn’t something I feel good at — it’s something I want to get better at,” says John. “I really enjoy the process of trying to find a better way to communicate thoughts and feelings and experiences using scratches on a page. It’s a source of real joy for me.”
John’s most recent novel, “Turtles All the Way Down,” tells the story of a 16-year-old girl who struggles with mental illness. “Part of what has made my own mental illness challenging for me has been that I often feel extremely alone in it and isolated by it,” says John. “I hope the story helps people who are struggling with intrusive thoughts or anxiety disorders feel less alone in that.”
This fall, John and his younger brother Hank (@hankgreen) performed in cities across the United States for the “Turtles All the Way Down” book tour. Watch our story to catch up with them in the San Francisco Bay Area.
Follow along on #IGYearInReview as we reflect on the most memorable Instagram trends of 2017.
For the fifth year in a row, #love is the top Instagram hashtag. “There can never be an excess of love. We always need more,” says paper typographer Sabeena Karnik (@sabeenu) from Mumbai, India. “It is the most powerful feeling which can be expressed in so many ways: the smallest act of kindness, a caring word, a hug, a smile, a kiss.”
With this piece of art, Sabeena’s intent is to spread the word — and the feeling. “The tiny parts of the heart represent small acts of love which is all we need to make the world a better place,” she explains. “If we give love, we will always receive abundance of it in return.”
Berry monate! Merry belly.
To see more from the front row, follow @susiebubble on Instagram.
Preppy uniforms, band Ts, combat trousers, Japanese prints — you name it, Susie Lau (@susiebubble) has worn it. “What phase haven’t I gone through?” says the London born-and-raised fashion blogger. “My interest in fashion really started when I was growing up in Camden, seeing how people expressed themselves through clothing,” she says. “I approached it in a really geeky way, reading up about costume and fashion history in the library and buying magazines, cutting things out to make inspiration collages. It was a form of escape.”
When she began her blog, Style Bubble, in 2006, Susie’s only intention was to keep it as her own personal hobby. “When I first started, it very much felt like I was an interloper, especially in fashion, which has always been so guarded and exclusive as an industry,” she says. But as the age of social media dawned, Susie’s blog remained at the forefront of the fashion world. “A decade on, fashion blogging has become an industry in itself,” says Susie. “It’s been good to witness that change gradually, and to know what my own niche is — which is namely discovering young talent.”