This is the easiest part. Just clicking on hyperlinks will reveal the content.
There are some amazing benefits to reading well crafted FedWiki material.
Context can be provided in many ways.
Paragraphs tend to be right sized.
Pages tend to be right sized.
Supporting multimedia may be embedded so you don't have to leave the page or the site.
As with any web page you can adjust the font size with simple key strokes.
If you have your own FedWiki site you can copy the pages to your site and annotate or edit the pages as you read them, including integrating them with your writing and augmenting them with external web content. (I have shifted into writing as you read.)
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DOT strict digraph rankdir=LR node [shape=box style="solid,rounded,filled" fillcolor=lightyellow penwidth=3 color=black] HERE NODE node [style="solid,rounded,filled" fillcolor=white penwidth=1 color=black] edge [style=solid penwidth=1 color=black] BACKLINKS NODE -> HERE node [style="dotted,rounded,filled" penwidth=1 fillcolor=white color=grey] edge [style=dotted penwidth=1 color=grey] HERE BACKLINKS NODE -> HERE STATIC strict digraph {rankdir=LR node [shape=box style="solid,rounded,filled" fillcolor=lightyellow penwidth=3 color=black] "Context" node [style="solid,rounded,filled" fillcolor=white penwidth=1 color=black] edge [style=solid penwidth=1 color=black] "FedWiki Uses (features)" -> "Context" node [style="dotted,rounded,filled" penwidth=1 fillcolor=white color=grey] edge [style=dotted penwidth=1 color=grey] "Index to FedWiki Work" -> "FedWiki Uses (features)"}