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Is it possible to read articles from the Internet "later" — already offline (Android)?
The question is this: I found an interesting article, clicked on it (or made a number of clicks), and then you can safely read it from your smartphone. Is there such a thing? Only the phone has a Wi-Fi connection, and, for example, the Internet will not work on it on the bus.
Manually open tabs on a smartphone and save them, and then delete them? Well, that's what I'm doing now - it's a quiet horror. Out of 10 minutes of reading - 5 is spent on all this fuss.
Google Reader always requires a connection, but it’s impossible to ask Google - either I can’t formulate a question, or something else.
Interested in implementations for Android.
Tell me please!
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Pocket app (getpocket.com). You can add articles from any type of device (from a laptop to PM) and then read.
NewsRob is a Google Reader client with the ability to read articles offline. For each feed, you can configure to download articles by link or only RSS content. I use it all the time, I synchronized it in the morning, I read it on the way to work in the subway.
— Instapaper
— Pocket
In the browser, put a button, a click and an article without any slag on your phone.
pocket, readability, readlater. Plus, I'm going to write a client for habr with autocaching soon.
I also use Evernote - I wrote a simple client that downloads articles from a closed site, cleans them up and sends them by mail to Evernote.
spool. Reading articles offline + it is possible to watch offline videos
But doesn't Opera Mobile (Mini) allow you to save pages in its own format? And Firefox Mobile allows you to save to PDF.
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