
Once you log in, Instapaper will sync your articles and you will be presented with your general article list, as well as with any other list that you had created in Instapaper in the past. The app fully assumes that you are registered to its web service and that you know your way around it, making it a bit unfriendly for those just starting with it. This is definitely convenient, but it would be nice to have at least a screen or two showing you what Instapaper does before diving into it. The app will then load your unread articles and have them ready for you to read in a short while. Upon opening Instapaper, you will see a screen for you to introduce your login credentials and that’s about it. Presentation and Navigation Menus Instapaper Let’s take an in-depth look at both of them across some key areas for read-later services and try to find out which emerges as the best one of them. Not long ago however, Read it Later, a quite popular read-later app re-launched as Pocket, an app (and web service) with far better design and other features that almost overnight made it the favorite of its kind among many iOS device users. Until just a few months ago, the most relevant of the read-later apps was undoubtedly Instapaper, which pioneered the service on the iPhone years ago and which still provides a great experience across many platforms. Some smart developers saw the opportunity here and created not just apps, but entire services around the read-later concept and the importance that having all our “pending” content always synced and available whenever we want it represents.

With the iPhone and other smartphones bringing us fresh content from the web at an unstoppable pace, it is not difficult to find ourselves drowned in pending videos that we want to watch, websites that we want to read or photos that we want to look at but simply have no time for them at that moment.
