Chrome’s ‘Read Later’ to allow Save tabs and access later

Google is working to add a ‘Read Later’ feature to the Chrome browser on Windows, Mac, Linux, and Chrome OS, to allow users to save tabs and access them later via a new button and menu in the browser UI. The feature is currently available behind a flag in Chrome 86 Canary.

There are plenty of services and browser extensions available to save articles to read later.

Firefox has integrated Pocket which lets you do the same.

Microsoft Edge legacy allows adding articles, images, and videos to the reading list to view them later. To add an article to the reading list in the old edge, you need to click on the bookmark icon and select the Reading list and click on the Add button.

The old Edge also allows us to set tabs aside.

New Microsoft Edge based on Chromium introduced Collections to save stuff you find on the internet to the browser.

If you’re using Chrome on iPhone or iPad, Chrome allows you to read pages later and offline with an optional feature built-in.

To add a page to your reading list, visit a page, tap on share option on the right, and tap “Read Later”.

Chrome for desktop or Windows, Linux, Mac OS, and Chrome OS now to get Read Later feature.

Chromium team offers this description for the feature flag in the Canary:

“Allow users to save tabs for later. Enables a new button and menu for accessing tabs saved for later -Mac, Windows, Linux, Chrome OS.”

Enable Read Later feature in Chrome

1. Launch Chrome browser

2. Visit chrome://flags page

3. Search for “Read Later”

Read Later flag

4. Select “Enabled” from the drop-down and restart the browser.

The feature is not working as of now.

Related articles:

Edge: How to add articles to Reading List to read later

Download Read It Later Beta extension with Support for Firefox 4 (Panorama)

Venkat Eswarlu

Venkat is an independent technology journalist and the founder of Techdows. He has been covering web browsers, Windows, and software news since 2009. His exclusive scoops on Chrome, Firefox, and Edge features have been cited by Forbes, TechCrunch, Wired, CNET, and other major publications.

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