A good continuity layer does not interrupt the reader. It simply preserves enough context so continuing feels natural.
Instead of asking the reader to remember where they were, ReaderPassport keeps a lightweight reading trail that can be resumed later.
On a single site, that means restoring the last read position. Across sites, it means connecting multiple reading sessions into one continuous experience.
Strengthening the signal
Visiting a second page transforms the interaction from a single visit into a sequence.
That sequence matters. It allows the system to understand intent — not just what you opened, but what you were actually moving through.
With that signal, the next step becomes clearer. Not just where you were, but what you were likely to continue.
Why this matters
Most reading experiences treat each page as isolated. But real reading is sequential. You move from one idea to another, one article to the next, one thread forward.
When that sequence is preserved, reading feels fluid. When it is broken, it feels fragmented.
Fragmentation is the default state of the web. Continuity is the missing layer.
Where readers drop off
Readers rarely leave at clean stopping points. They leave in the middle — mid-paragraph, mid-idea, mid-thought.
That makes returning difficult. The brain has to reconstruct context before continuing.
If that effort is too high, the reader does not continue.
If the effort is removed, continuation becomes the default behavior.
Another natural exit point
This is a good place to leave the page. You are far enough from the top that your exact position is no longer obvious.
That is where continuity matters most.
Go back to Page 1.
If ReaderPassport is working properly, you should not need to search for your place.
The outcome
The goal is simple: make continuing easier than restarting.
When that happens consistently, readers stay in motion instead of dropping off.
And when readers stay in motion, writers keep the attention they worked to earn.
Return to Page 1 to complete the demo.