Mac|Life

Save content for later

- NateDrake

Pocket makes working with a reading list even easier

Save, organize, and view web pages across all your devices with Pocket

Students and researcher­s, rejoice! The basic version of the Pocket extension for Safari is free, and enables you to tag and search through previously saved web content, making it more flexible than Safari’s own Reading List feature.

After installing the extension, a Pocket button appears to the left of the address bar. Click this at any time to save the page you’re viewing to Pocket’s reading list. Pocket makes working with a reading list even easier, thanks to abilities such as adding tags and marking content as a favorite to help you to look things up.

You can even take your Pocket list with you by installing the iOS version from the App Store. Sign in with your Pocket account to keep your list in sync between your Mac and iOS devices. You can save content to your list in Pocket for iOS using the Share menu. This guide focuses on the Pocket extension in Safari for Mac, though it’s available for other browsers, such as Firefox. There’s even a standalone Pocket app in the Mac App Store, if you prefer to read saved pages while offline.

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