TLDR is a website specialized in the creation of “summaries” of Web pages, articles, guides or more or less extensive texts. The results are not always optimal but it is worth trying to see the effect it makes …
The informative offer of the modern Web is richer and more numerous than ever, and we do not always have the time – or the desire – to put up paginated and paginated text by reading an article, a study, a guide or a real essay(maybe for school study purposes) on this or that topic.
Fortunately, in such cases it is the Web itself that meets us with a service like TLDR This!, site specifically designed for analyzing long texts and extrapolating more or less brief “summaries” able to present the “juice” of the speech independently from the topic – and from the language in which the above texts are written.
The use of TLDR This (from the famous jargon of Internet “Too Long; Didn’t Read”) could not be simpler: just copy the link to the long article that we want to summarize or, alternatively, copy all the original text in the appropriate boxes, click on the button Process Text
and wait a few seconds to consult the summary paragraphs extracted from the service.
TDLR is also available as an extension for Mozilla Firefox and Chrome. This does not always guarantee perfect results in its summary action: in general, the longer an article is, the more the summary improves, while it is highly inadvisable to use TLDR This to summarize short news hoping to get something vaguely understandable and contextualized.