I'll drop you my classification file shortly. It's mostly-manual classification with some pattern-based assignments. Every site that's appeared on the front page a minimum of 15 times, IIRC, and quite a few below that threshold. Coverage is about 65% of front-page articles 2007--2023.
Slug-selection is a tough challenge. AI may not solve it, but at least it will make it more non-deterministic ;-) Reviewing the site again, you're largely doing quite well.
(I'd really like to see a widely-used abstract or summary semantic markup usage, though microformats seem not to have been widely adopted: <https://microformats.org/>.)
The layout / horizontal breaks observation is mostly something that's nagged me for ages in card-based layouts going back to Google+ in the early 2010s. It took me a while to realise that what nagged me about the layout was having multiple columns of cards with no vertical coherence. It just sort of jumbles in my mind, and I'm not sure if that's a cognitive defect of mine or a more general response. I've come to appreciate print-based layout practices increasingly with time, particularly as I find online / fluid layouts increasingly less satisfactory.
I agree with the lack of vertical alignment. It's not just you, many people have the same view, and there's a reason it's been used in newspapers. And there's a reason it's not used when the content and layout is generated automatically, but I'm going to work on a solution.
Slug-selection is a tough challenge. AI may not solve it, but at least it will make it more non-deterministic ;-) Reviewing the site again, you're largely doing quite well.
(I'd really like to see a widely-used abstract or summary semantic markup usage, though microformats seem not to have been widely adopted: <https://microformats.org/>.)
The layout / horizontal breaks observation is mostly something that's nagged me for ages in card-based layouts going back to Google+ in the early 2010s. It took me a while to realise that what nagged me about the layout was having multiple columns of cards with no vertical coherence. It just sort of jumbles in my mind, and I'm not sure if that's a cognitive defect of mine or a more general response. I've come to appreciate print-based layout practices increasingly with time, particularly as I find online / fluid layouts increasingly less satisfactory.
(I've made some past observations about layout and on-screen reading on traditional displays vs. a large-format e-ink display. I increasingly strongly prefer the latter for reading, though even there many issues remain. Search: <https://hn.algolia.com/?dateRange=all&page=0&prefix=false&qu...> and focusing on scroll-vs-paginated displays: <https://hn.algolia.com/?dateRange=all&page=0&prefix=true&que...>, if you feel like hunting through a bunch of my whinges ;-)