🤖 AI Stream Article

A browser bookmarklet that transforms the main article on any page into an AI-chat-style streaming experience — replaying the same text you were already reading, one token at a time.

Install

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How to Use

  1. Drag the AI Stream Article button above into your browser bookmarks bar.
  2. Navigate to any article, blog post, or documentation page.
  3. Click AI Stream Article in your bookmarks bar.
  4. Watch the article replay with AI-style streaming. Use the on-page controls to pause, skip, adjust speed, or restore.
  5. Click the bookmarklet again (or press Restore) to return to the original page.

Manual Install (if drag-and-drop is blocked)

  1. Click Copy URL above to copy the bookmarklet URL to your clipboard.
  2. In your browser, open Bookmarks → Add Bookmark (or press Ctrl+D / ⌘D).
  3. Give it any name — for example AI Stream Article.
  4. Paste the copied URL into the bookmark's URL / Address field, then save.

On-Page Controls

Pause / ResumeFreeze or continue streaming
SkipReveal all remaining text instantly
SpeedCycle: Relaxed → Standard → Fast
ReplayRun the effect again (shown on completion)
RestoreReturn the original page content

A compact floating pill also appears in the bottom-right corner whenever the article surface scrolls out of view.

Works Best On

Blog posts News articles Essays Documentation pages Wikipedia articles Long-form writing Technical tutorials

Pages that are primarily app dashboards, login screens, or canvas-rendered content may show a "Could not identify a main article" message.

Privacy & Safety

🔒
The bookmarklet runs entirely in your browser tab. It makes no network requests, sends no data anywhere, and stores nothing beyond temporary in-memory state while the effect is active. The original page content is never modified permanently — clicking Restore returns everything to its previous state. This installation page also requires no external fonts, analytics, or third-party scripts.

Compatibility

Targets current desktop versions of Chrome, Edge, Firefox, and Safari. Some sites may block bookmarklet execution via Content Security Policy headers — this is a browser-level restriction and the bookmarklet cannot work around it. Reduced-motion preferences are respected automatically.