Sometimes, the Work Is Easier Than the Workaround

If you spend hours looking for tricks, gimmicks, and automations, you might as well do the actual thing

Niklas Göke
Forge
Published in
6 min readOct 11, 2021

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Photo: Nupat Arjkla/EyeEm/Getty Images

When my favorite writer stopped writing, I decided to save all his articles, lest he delete them. I knew I could save them one by one in Evernote, but since he had published over 100 pieces, I thought there might be a way to avoid this tedium.

I asked a developer friend for help, and he referred me to another mutual friend of ours. I messaged that friend on Slack but didn’t get a response. A week later, I emailed him. A few more days went by, but then, he responded.

My friend suggested two scraping tools for the job. I started comparing their features and pricing. As it turned out, one tool would limit exports on a free trial, so I went with the other one. I downloaded it, installed it, and made an account.

The tool was pretty technical, so it took a while to grasp the basics. Eventually, I got it to load my favorite author’s index page, where all his stories were linked. Then, however, the tool required making complex workflows, and to top it all off, it only seemed to export to CSV, not PDF.

At this point, I finally decided the juice was no longer worth the squeeze. I sat down after…

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Niklas Göke
Forge
Writer for

I write for dreamers, doers, and unbroken optimists. Read my daily blog here: https://nik.art/