If you can’t resist your web-browsing addiction when you are in a connection-less travel, there’s a solution to that, Pocket. It is formerly known as Read It Later and is known for being a lightweight app that lets you save web pages for offline viewing. You won’t be needing to draft saved URLs in your email. Pocket is much efficient.
First and foremost, don’t be fooled by Pocket’s feature that says ‘you can save audio/video clips for offline viewing’. It is just a fluke.
After installing Pocket to your Android device, you can already start adding Web pages to your app. There are many ways in which you can save web contents to Pocket: within your apps and mobile browsers, desktop browsers, and email. It automatically syncs those saved pages to your Android device.
You can add as many Web pages, emails, images, videos, and audio clips to your pocket as long as the application you are using is supported by Pocket. Don’t worry, basics like Instagram, Twitter, Facebook, Opera, Dolphin Browser and many more are supported. Users are also able to choose whether saved web pages are optimized for mobile or desktop viewing and restricting downloading to Wi-Fi connection only.
One of its selling point is its slick interface. As more content are added, the app builds a list of preview of each Web pages. The list made by the app is simple and slick. You just need to tap the item to open it up. Users are also given a search box to search for their saved URLs or titels though it would be best if they will make searching keywords available. Conents can also be organized by content, video or image.
If you are a web-browsing addict that always want to be intact with reading Web content, Pocket is for you. Its clean user interface combined with its simplicity makes Web browsing offline seems like you are connected to the web even though you are not.
First and foremost, don’t be fooled by Pocket’s feature that says ‘you can save audio/video clips for offline viewing’. It is just a fluke.
After installing Pocket to your Android device, you can already start adding Web pages to your app. There are many ways in which you can save web contents to Pocket: within your apps and mobile browsers, desktop browsers, and email. It automatically syncs those saved pages to your Android device.
You can add as many Web pages, emails, images, videos, and audio clips to your pocket as long as the application you are using is supported by Pocket. Don’t worry, basics like Instagram, Twitter, Facebook, Opera, Dolphin Browser and many more are supported. Users are also able to choose whether saved web pages are optimized for mobile or desktop viewing and restricting downloading to Wi-Fi connection only.
One of its selling point is its slick interface. As more content are added, the app builds a list of preview of each Web pages. The list made by the app is simple and slick. You just need to tap the item to open it up. Users are also given a search box to search for their saved URLs or titels though it would be best if they will make searching keywords available. Conents can also be organized by content, video or image.
If you are a web-browsing addict that always want to be intact with reading Web content, Pocket is for you. Its clean user interface combined with its simplicity makes Web browsing offline seems like you are connected to the web even though you are not.