How to Save Anything to SaveThenRead (And What Sites Work Best)
Five ways to get content into SaveThenRead — from browser extension to URL paste to file upload — and a breakdown of which sites work best with each method.
Read article →Practical guides on building a reading habit that actually sticks.
Five ways to get content into SaveThenRead — from browser extension to URL paste to file upload — and a breakdown of which sites work best with each method.
Read article →EPUB and PDF support just got a major upgrade: automatic chapter detection, styled headings, and a Contents panel so you can jump anywhere in a book without losing your place.
Read article →Reading without annotating is like attending a lecture without taking notes. Here's the minimal system that turns what you read into something you actually use.
Read article →An unlimited reading list is a guarantee of overwhelm. Setting a hard cap on saved articles is one of the most effective things you can do for your reading habit.
Read article →Articles aren't the only things worth reading. Here's how to bring long-form documents, reports, and ebooks into one reading workflow.
Read article →You don't need an hour. Ten focused minutes a day, compounded over a year, is more reading than most people manage in five.
Read article →Convenience vs. comprehension — the device you read on affects more than you think. Here's how to pick the right one for the job.
Read article →Your reading list is only useful if you trust it. Here's why ruthless deletion is the most underrated reading habit.
Read article →Reading five articles in one sitting doesn't make you a reader. Reading one article every day does. Here's the psychology behind streaks and why they work.
Read article →Text-to-speech used to sound like a robot. Now it sounds like a person — and it's unlocking reading time that most people didn't know they had.
Read article →X moves fast. The good stuff disappears into your timeline within hours. Here's how to actually keep what's worth keeping.
Read article →Your reading backlog doesn't need more willpower — it needs a system. Here's the SAVE/READ/THINK/TRACK method for keeping your reading list clean.
Read article →Speed reading has a dubious reputation. But bionic reading is different — here's what the science says and what it actually feels like to use it.
Read article →Saving articles is the easy part. Reading them is where most people fall apart. Here's a practical system that works.
Read article →A backlog of 200+ unread articles isn't a reading problem — it's a decision problem. Here's the system to clear it and keep it clear.
Read article →Most read-later apps turn into digital graveyards. Here's what makes the difference between a list you ignore and one you actually work through.
Read article →Reading without retention is just moving your eyes. Here's a dead-simple approach to taking notes while you read that doesn't slow you down.
Read article →AI summarisation isn't cheating. Used correctly, it's the most powerful reading productivity tool since the highlighter.
Read article →The average person encounters more information in a day than a medieval scholar did in a lifetime. Here's how to stop drowning and start filtering.
Read article →Instapaper, Readwise, SaveThenRead, and what's left after Pocket shut down — what actually separates a read-later app you'll use from one that becomes a graveyard.
Read article →Most reading habits fail in the first two weeks. Here's what the ones that last have in common — and how to build one for yourself.
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