Seventy percent of the subscription fee goes to the publishers of the websites that you read, as compensation for not showing the ads they carry (which is how many websites pay their bills). While Instapaper is free, Readability requires a subscription for anything but the most basic features. Readability is similar to Instapaper but puts more emphasis on making the pages more readable by eliminating clutter and makes it easy to access your articles on any device. Possibly the most useful option is viewing the article in “text” mode, which shows you the text and pictures in the article while stripping away other parts of the Web page such as navigation, ads, header and footer, etc. You also have options to share the article with others, archive it so you can refer back to it, or delete it from your list. Click the name of the article and you’re taken to it. There are also Instapaper apps for mobile devices, like iPhone, iPad, and Android phones and tablets, that allow you to read the articles on those devices. I assume he’s just repeating the story he was told.When you are ready to read the articles you have saved, revisit the Instapaper website to see a list of them. I like Steve Streza, and I don’t think he’d knowingly mislead people. You can’t force people to know backstories.īut for Pocket to repeatedly state the opposite - that they were the first service like this, and that Instapaper followed their lead - is over the line, and I won’t sit here quietly and let that go unchallenged. I don’t care anymore whether people know how much Read It Later copied from Instapaper in our early years. I don’t care anymore whether people know that Instapaper defined the read-later service and was first to most of its core features. This is ancient history, and while it annoyed me at the time, I don’t really care anymore. And while Read It Later has introduced some original features, Weiner systematically copied almost every major Instapaper feature over the first few years of Instapaper’s existence. Months after Instapaper launched all of these features and was being very well-received in the tech press, in October 2008, Read It Later added a web service for sync, other-browser bookmarklets, and offline saving. That’s why I think it’s extremely misleading, or simply false, to say that Read It Later/Pocket was “the first save-for-later service”. And in 2007, Read It Later offered none of these. I think most people would consider these elements - multiple browser and device support, sync service, text extraction and reformatting, and offline saving - the essential ingredients that make a read-later service. 1 A few months later, I added its text-extraction parser, and in June 2008, I released its iPhone app with customizable text settings and offline saving. Instapaper launched in January 2008 as a bookmarklet that worked in any browser and a web service to sync your bookmarks between devices. This is what Pocket now claims was the first read-later service. There was no web service, no sync, and no support for other browsers - just a special bookmarks list stored locally in Firefox. It was just a Firefox extension with two buttons, read later and reading list, that behaved like a bookmarks folder. The first public mentions I can find of Read It Later are in November 2007. Whether this is true depends on how you define that. Later in the episode, he made the same claim a second time: Read It Later was the first service in this category. Steve: … “It’s worth noting that Read It Later and Pocket, we were the, kind of, first people to develop a save-for-later service, and that term, ‘read it later’, had kind of been adopted by other companies who are building these kind of similar products.” … Mike: “What sets Pocket apart from other services like Instapaper or Readability?” Its great for long articles and blog posts that you find during the day and would like to read, but dont have the time when you find them. To save web pages for later offline reading: go to, install the Read Later bookmark, and mark any pages youd like to read later. Weiner has commented numerous times in the press that Read It Later was the first read-later service, and that it predated Instapaper by being started in 2007. Instapaper is a simple tool to save web pages for reading later. Steve’s the lead developer at Instapaper’s biggest competitor, Pocket, founded by Nate Weiner and formerly named Read It Later. Steve Streza was this week’s guest on CMD+SPACE. I’m nervous to post this, but my readers and customers were very appreciative that I clarified the Readability story after some incorrect assumptions in the press, so I’ll take the chance one more time. A programmer, writer, podcaster, geek, and coffee enthusiast.
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