Not infrequently, we receive a story submission to SoylentNews that consists of a single URL. Or, a story that contains but a single sentence or paragraph along with the URL. During weekends and holidays, the story submission queue tends to run dry. We have an IRC channel (#rss-bot) that gathers RSS links from around the web. Hmm.
It would be really handy if there were an automated way to "scrape" the contents of that page. In some cases, a simple redirect of the output of a text-based browser like Lynx would do the trick. Unfortunately, all too many sites subscribe to the idea that a web page needs to pull in Javascript and libraries from a myriad of other sites. Failing to do so displays a blank page.
There must be a way to do it — search engines like Google and Bing must extract the page text in order to index it. It would be best to have a general-purpose solution; having a custom template for each site is time-consuming to create and maintain (think if the site changes its layout). Our site is powered by Perl, so that would be the obvious preference.
So, fellow Soylentils, what tools and/or techniques have you used? What has worked for you?
Maybe I'm approaching this the wrong way? When all you have is a hammer... what am I missing here? Is there another approach?
(Score: 4, Informative) by isostatic on Saturday June 04 2016, @10:37PM
Good evening. Today is Good Friday. There is no news
If there's nothing to report, don't report it. Dont go for an 18 minute news program consisting of 15 mintues of "old sportsman has died" and a couple of minutes of "politicians lie" as happened with the BBC this evening.