Read it later apps are massively popular, with examples such as Instapaper or Pocket being among the most downloaded apps on Google Play...
Read it later apps are massively popular, with examples such as Instapaper or Pocket being among the most downloaded apps on Google Play. Google is also getting into the game now, albeit in a different way, with the Chrome team adding a read it later feature to the development versions of the browser.
As alluded to, both Chrome Dev and Chrome Beta have this, but in
slightly different guises. In Chrome Beta, version 53.0.2785.97, the
feature needs to be turned on in chrome://flags with
#enable-read-it-later-in-menu, with an option then appearing in both
app-specific and 'system-level' Custom Tabs that says 'Keep tab in
Chrome'. In Chrome Dev version 54.0.2840.6, although the flag is still
there, it is enabled by default and has been renamed to 'Read it later
in Chrome'.


The feature in Chrome Dev (left and middle) and Chrome Beta (right). Note the change in wording.
Upon tapping this, the full Chrome browser opens with the tab already
loaded (as with the 'Open in Chrome' button) but instead of keeping
Chrome in focus, it refocuses the original app with the Custom Tab
closed. A toast notification appears at the bottom of the screen, saying
'Your tab is now in the background'.
All in all, this seems like a genuinely useful feature; I often don't
want to read an article found on reddit or Twitter immediately, but want
to bookmark it for later. This automates the process for me, which is
pretty handy. Chrome 53 should be rolling out pretty soon, if not
imminently, although since the feature seems to be still in flux it's
more likely we'll see this in Chrome 54, which is due for release in
mid-October. Both the latest releases on Chrome Dev and Chrome Beta are
available on either APK Mirror or Google Play.
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