| So summarizing: its intent isn't clear? FWIW: Pocket is similar in general design to a number of "read it later" services (the Android app is still identified as "com.ideashower.readitlater.pro"), such as the now-defunct Readability, still-extant Instapaper, Maciej Czeglowski's Pinboard, and the FS/OSS Wallabag. There's a ... (very?) loose kinship with tools like Zotero, Calibre, and Elsevier-owned Mandelay, also knowledge-management / article management tools. Pocket lets you: - Save articles for later reading. - Display many (though not all) of them in a simplified and standardised "reader" view. - Apply tags. (I abuse this feature horribly.) - Add highlights. (3 per article for the free version, unlimited for pro.) - There is of course a social feature allowing shares and recommendations. I avoid this like the plauge. - There is, inexplicably, no way to share, export, or otherwise save a bibliographic reading list, say, of articles on some topic. - Exporting the article listing is possible (JSON format). You'll have to re-fetch items individually if you do this. - Articles are not saved and you're still subject to linkrot, edits, or substitutions at the origin source. - Saved content is accessible from any device by account, either from a Web client, from Firefox itself, or through Mobile apps (iOS, Android). The functionality exceeds that of bookmarks, sacrifices local control and storage. |
I kind of self host by parking interesting pages in new tabs and read them later. I've got more than 100 tabs open in my Firefox on Android. They're also a replacement for bookmarks.