15 years into the web and still we see new sites coming out with the "Go Away" pattern. I just don't understand it.<p>If a potential user has somehow managed to find his way onto your homepage, that's a big win for you. You need to take that opportunity to hook him as quickly and effectively as possible. Given the average attention span on the internet, you've got at most 5 seconds to avert the Back Button, then maybe 10 more to convince that user that your thing is worth investing some time in.<p>Know the absolute worst thing you can do at that point? Stick that user on a page with absolutely no information about your product, then assign him some chores to do so before you'll let him even find out. Like this:<p><a href="http://readfa.st/signin" rel="nofollow">http://readfa.st/signin</a>
Hey guys, great idea, but your method seems off from most of the speed reading courses I've found.<p>Whereas those courses focus on training you to not just read individual words, but entire lines or blocks of text, and without subvocalization, yours seems to focus on increasing your word-by-word reading speed as much as possible.<p>In your FAQ you say:<p><i>"We have taken the latest speed-reading curricula and cut out all of the extraneous exercises to create an effective, simple tool to improve reading speed. The readfa.st curriculum forces users to read at speeds that push the upper limits of your comprehension and by constantly challenging you to push yourself faster; at the same time we use regular quizzes to ensure that you maintain your understanding of the text."</i><p>What is the 'latest speed-reading curricula' you've based the site exercises on? I have an interest but not expertise in this subject, would love to know more details.<p>Also...<p><i>"Ani, one of our co-founders, read at over 1,000 words per minute without any training. When we noticed how blazingly fast he was finishing books, we began to look into what makes people read at such vastly different speeds. We did extensive research into the scientific (and pseudo-scientific) literature around how people read, but the body of work is not very encouraging. Most speed-reading products make unverified and unverifiable claims about their effectiveness, and because of their SEO and sales interests, those specious claims overwhelm most legitimate discussion around speed-reading. One of our goals is for readfa.st to help us better understand the process of reading and what factors affect speed and comprehension."</i><p>It would be both awesome in general and good marketing in particular if you elaborated on your findings. Think OK-Cupid data blog but about speed reading.<p>Finally, one question. On the initial assessment I hit 'Too Fast' at 1105 WPM, but the report said I was only reading at 880 WPM. Why the discrepancy?<p><a href="http://i.imgur.com/zf9AC.png" rel="nofollow">http://i.imgur.com/zf9AC.png</a>
Every time the topic of speed reading comes up I post about<p><a href="http://www.zapreader.com/" rel="nofollow">http://www.zapreader.com/</a><p>This javascript site parses a whole lot of text and displays it at a fixed location very quickly. I can read about 475 words/minute with very good comprehension. I don't catch all the specific names but in some cases I find that I form a high level overview of the material much faster. I tend to notice big picture patterns when I use this tool.
I don't know why more people aren't writing apps that work like this for ios or android. When I finish my current side project I want to try something like this in flex.
This site is fundamentally flawed. The key to fast reading is learning to read phrases rather than words. It is the same concept as reading words instead of letters (obviously after you have passed the phonetics reading stage).<p>The only site I know of to truly learn to read fast, without silly scams or even a cost, is <a href="http://www.readspeeder.com/" rel="nofollow">http://www.readspeeder.com/</a> It takes a little figuring out as it is really lacking in usability (I suggest reading the help files) but it will give you staggering results.
Good stuff. It is the first Show HN site that I actually bookmarked for later. It is well-done and it is <i>interesting</i>.<p>A couple of things though. Requiring an email address upfront means that I will feed you a @mailinator.com one. Let people play with the site a bit, and then require creating an account if they want to save the progress... or something along these lines.<p>Second, a confirmation email appears to include a numerical user ID. This inadvertently discloses the number of users you have to anyone who signs up. May want to fix that.
Nice idea! A couple of suggestions:
1) Make the quizzes shorter than 2 minutes.
2) As avree and bherms suggested, you need an intro. before the sign-up. I'm just an impulsive sign-upper because I like checking out new sites, but I suggested the site to my friend and he just stared at it before getting distracted by something else.
Awesome app! I'd actually enjoy reading regular books like this. Can I upload PDFs to have read to me at my speed of choice? If you could access my kindle library that be even better.
I wouldn't change a thing. This is awesome. I will be using this to consistently improve my language. With the amount of content I read online, improving a skill at the same time is an added bonus that I think is awesome. Curious how you will monetize.
mh would be awesome if you make an background-Fallback for the buttons or add prefixes for more browsers.<p>i.e. in Opera i don't see any linear-gradient if you only use -moz- / -webkit-
just add a background:#color one line above the linear-gradient. Older browsers display the #color and newer browsers use the background:linear-gradient