Robert Kevin Rose (born 1977) is an American Internet entrepreneur who co-founded Revision3, Digg, Pownce, and Milk. He also served as production assistant and co-host at TechTV’s The Screen Savers. From 2012 to 2015, he was a venture partner at GV.
The main idea is that you can access it regardless of which device you’re currently using. Like saving an article you see when you’re on your PC for when you’re about to leave so you can read it on your phone while on the train
You can do that just with Firefox’s syncing feature though. You don’t even have to save it intentionally; so long as you’re logged in on both devices it’ll be listed in your history and/or open tabs.
Tabs aren’t meant as bookmarks. Read later is for saving anything to any amount of time, and it doesn’t take up responses of your system, is searchable, has tags, reading view etc.
Your comment is grandma with dementia level of tech illiteracy.
But even in that case, just bookmark, save, and/or archive the pages in question? It doesn’t make sense for them to maintain servers and code on a service so easily replicated by the browser itself.
I’m just not sure what a read later app is even for. Can’t you just leave the tab open?
The internet is not always available for at least some people.
You’d need the internet to sync with Pocket on another device. If you need the page on the same device, you can save it as a PDF.
The main idea is that you can access it regardless of which device you’re currently using. Like saving an article you see when you’re on your PC for when you’re about to leave so you can read it on your phone while on the train
You can do that just with Firefox’s syncing feature though. You don’t even have to save it intentionally; so long as you’re logged in on both devices it’ll be listed in your history and/or open tabs.
Not on devices without Firefox. Pocket is great for sending articles to read on my Kindle, for example.
“Why not just slow down your device?”
Tabs aren’t meant as bookmarks. Read later is for saving anything to any amount of time, and it doesn’t take up responses of your system, is searchable, has tags, reading view etc. Your comment is grandma with dementia level of tech illiteracy.
You’d need the PC equivalent of a grandma with dementia for it to struggle running Firefox. Anecdotally, I game with my tab collection regularly with no issues, but here’s a more scientific test: https://www.howtogeek.com/how-many-tabs-does-it-take-to-slow-down-your-browser/
But even in that case, just bookmark, save, and/or archive the pages in question? It doesn’t make sense for them to maintain servers and code on a service so easily replicated by the browser itself.
That’s literally what tabs are on mobile browsers