Reading List is a great feature of Safari
that syncs saved web pages between Safari on all of your Macs and iOS devices.
This lets you save web pages to read later and works a lot like Pocket and
Instapaper, except that it doesn’t require any additional downloads, toolbars,
plugins, or third party apps in order to use, because it’s all built right into
Safari in OS X and iOS.
Though it may seem to directly compete
with the likes of third party apps like Pocket, Reading List often works best
as a temporary bookmark sharing service, letting you send and share links from
one of your own devices to another and from computer to computer, without the
cluttering of the actual Bookmarks menus with links and web pages you may only
need to access once or twice. That is really it’s strong suite for many users,
so keep that in mind when using Reading List, and don’t necessarily think of it
as a Pocket/Instapaper replacement.
Using Reading List in Safari for Mac OS X
There are a few basic commands you should
know for saving and sharing links with Reading List in Safari for OS X:
·
Shift+Click a
link in
Safari to immediately save it to Reading List
·
Command+Shift+D to immediately save the current page to
Reading List
·
Command+Shift+L to show or hide Reading List
·
Right-Click a
link and
choose “Add Link to Reading List”
Web pages saved to Reading List sync
practically instantaneously to Safari on all other Mac and iOS devices that are
configured to be using the same iCloud
account, but without iCloud Reading List will not sync at all.
Using Reading List in Safari for iOS
On the iOS side of things, Reading List
is even more simple to use than OS X, both for saving links and for retrieving
them:
·
Tap and hold
any link in
Safari, then choose “Add to Reading List” to save a web page for later
·
On iPad: Tap the bookmark button, then tap the eyeglasses icon at the bottom to reveal the Reading
List
·
On iPhone & iPod touch: Tap Bookmarks > Reading List
You might have noticed that Twitter on
the iPhone also has an option to “Save for Later”, but unlike the iPad version
of Twitter it does not send those saved links to Pocket or Instapaper, instead
it sends the saved links to Reading List.
If you don’t use Reading List at all
right now, try using it as a personal bookmark sharing service rather than a
pure reader, you just may get more use out of it that way.



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