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These bookmarking apps can organize all of that content you’re saving for later

These bookmarking apps can organize all of that content you’re saving for later

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Pocket may be the best known, but there are a variety of alternatives with useful new bookmarking features.

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Front page of Pocket app.
Screenshot: Pocket

It’s hard to keep up with everything you come across on the web, such as an article you don’t have time to read at the moment or a video you’d like to run again later. Years ago, I started getting the better of this issue with Pocket, a well-known app that allows you to bookmark an article to a separate server and then retrieve it to read at your leisure. Since then, a number of similar services have appeared, offering a variety of features — and a variety of prices.

What follows is a description of Pocket and some of the available apps. Most offer free versions and sync across a number of devices, including web browsers, Android devices, and iPhones.

Pocket

Pocket page with Recent Saves on top and Pocket-worthy Reads below.
Pocket has developed an attractive interface and a variety of features.
Screenshot: Mozilla

Pocket has developed a nicely designed interface with lots of options that let you sort your articles from newest or oldest, choose favorites, display them in list or grid format, and archive the ones you want to keep or organize them via tags. Its homescreen shows you your most recent saves along with its own list of “Pocket-Worthy Reads.” You can share your articles via social media or recommend them within the app for others to find. There is a set of curated reads; extensions for a wide variety of browsers, including Chrome, Firefox, Edge, and Safari; and apps for Android and iOS devices.

Pocket is now “part of the Firefox family,” and as of June 11th, 2023, Pocket users were notified that they needed to transition to Mozilla accounts. Still, if you use Pocket and already have a Firefox account or don’t mind creating one, you can simply convert the account and continue with Pocket as before.

Paid version: The Premium version ($4.99 a month or $44.99 a year) adds a permanent library of everything you’ve saved (in case it disappears from the web) as well as full-text search and other features.

Instapaper

Instapaper, which has been around for a while, is a solid, easy-to-use app.
Instapaper, which has been around for a while, is a solid, easy-to-use app.

Like Pocket, Instapaper started out as a simple web add-on and has gone through several iterations (and owners); currently, it is part of an independent company called Instapaper Holdings. The web app has a nice and simple UI; while there is no grid view, you can turn thumbnails on and off. It offers (and syncs across) web browsers (using a Chrome extension, Safari extension, Firefox extension, or bookmarklet), iOS, Android, and Kindle. A free account lets you save an unlimited number of articles, videos, and other content. You can also highlight text in the articles you’ve saved, create up to five notes a month, and edit the name, link, or summary of each article.

Paid version: The Premium version ($5.99 a month or $59.99 a year) adds full-text search for your saved documents, unlimited notes, a permanent archive, and text-to-speech.

Raindrop.io

Front page of Raindrop.io app, including large images of bookmarks and menu on left.
Raindrop.io is for the serious user and offers a number of options and UIs.
Screenshot: Raindrop.io

Raindrop may not have the simplicity of Instapaper, but it has a load of features that could be helpful, especially if you’re serious about your info collections. (And it is one of the favorites of Verge editor-at-large David Pierce.) The web version lets you view your articles in a variety of formats, including an interesting one called Moodboard. Like most of the others listed here, the free version of Raindrop offers an unlimited number of bookmark saves on an unlimited number of devices; these include apps for Macs, iOS devices, Android devices, Linux devices, and extensions for Chrome, Safari, Firefox, and Edge browsers. You can share with others and edit titles, tags, and descriptions.

Paid version: The Pro version ($3 a month or $28 a year) adds AI suggestions, full-text search, cloud backup, and a permanent library of all your bookmarked sites, among other features.

PaperSpan

PaperSpan provides simple and basic bookmarking.
PaperSpan provides simple and basic bookmarking.

PaperSpan is an old-fashioned, simple app that is fine if you want a really plain bookmarking service — and it promises no ads and no tracking, which is a plus. You can create separate folders for your saved bookmarks, but that’s about it; there are mobile apps for iOS and Android and extensions for Chrome and Firefox. Unlike other services listed here, there are no nice graphics, highlighting, or choice between lists and grids. But if you just save articles in order to be able to easily read them and don’t care about all the fancy add-ons that the other options offer, this is for you.

Paid version: None.

Matter

Matter read-it-later app with list of articles in center and
Matter’s web-based app is basic and useful, although its iOS app offers more features.

Matter is currently only available for iOS devices and the web, with extensions for Chrome, Safari, and Firefox browsers. The free version allows you to do a variety of read-it-later tasks, including highlighting, adding notes, and listening to an audio reading of the article; the homepage offers suggestions as to what you might like to read next. The iOS app offers somewhat more than the web version, allowing you to set a reading goal and add your Gmail address to pull your newsletters into the app. You can also sync highlights to note-taking apps such as Notion or Obsidian or send articles to your Kindle.

Paid version: Matter Premium costs $14.99 a month or $79.99 a year and adds HD audio in a more natural voice, AI transcription of podcasts and YouTube videos, and integrations with other services.

Reader

Website with highlighted section and pop-up showing options from Reader.
Reader lets you mark up the original articles; highlights and other markups will be saved in the app.
Screenshot: Readwise

Readwise’s Reader, which lets you save a wide variety of content types, including YouTube videos (and their transcriptions), is the only app listed here that is for-pay only. The Verge’s David Pierce recently recommended it, and I must say, it’s intriguing. Reader adds a bar to the top of your browser that lets you overlay notes, tags, and more, directly to the original article as you’re reading it. A checkmark on the extension icon shows it’s active; uncheck it, and the markups disappear from your original article but not from the copy that’s been saved to Reader. You are also provided with a personal email address that allows you to forward newsletters and other inbox-cluttering emails directly to Reader. I only wish there were some sort of basic free version.

Paid version: You get a one-month free trial (perhaps two, if you ask for it). After that, you must subscribe to both Readwise and Reader for $12.99 a month or $119.88 a year.

Pinboard

Pinboard bookmark page with text descriptions in middle and a tag cloud at right.
Pinboard uses a straightforward text-based format.
Screenshot: Nine Fives Software

Pinboard, which calls itself “social bookmarking for introverts,” launched in 2009 and has retained its text-based format since. You can make your bookmarks public or private, mark them as “read later,” use tags to organize them, and add notes, among other features. The app uses a bookmarklet that sits on your browser bar (rather than a browser extension) to capture sites; it has a custom version for mobile devices. Pinboard is also security minded: according to the site, there is “no third party content of any kind on the site. No tracking, no ads, no Google Analytics, not even outside javascript.” So if that’s the kind of thing that concerns you — or if you’re looking for something straightforward and somewhat old-fashioned — this may be one to try out.

Paid version: There is no free version. Pinboard costs $22 a year, or $39 a year if you want to add archiving. You can, according to the site, get a full refund within the first trial week.

Update, November 1st, 2024: This article was originally published on February 24th, 2022; entries have been updated, new apps have been added, and Omnivore has been removed.