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action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /home4/scienrds/scienceandnerds/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6114Source: https:\/\/www.theverge.com\/2022\/7\/11\/23200855\/upnext-read-later-app<\/a> Upnext<\/a> is a read-later app. No, it\u2019s a bookmarking app. No, it\u2019s a content-curation-social-network thing. Even Jeroen Seghers, one of the service\u2019s co-founders, struggles to explain it. \u201cLonger term,\u201d he says, \u201cI like to think about what we\u2019re building as a knowledge browser.\u201d But even he admits that doesn\u2019t mean much to anyone right now. Eventually, Upnext settled on \u201cA reader with superpowers,\u201d which is close enough.<\/p>\n Whatever you call it, here\u2019s what Upnext is: it\u2019s a place to save and interact with content from all over the internet. It handles articles and blog posts like Pocket<\/a> or Instapaper<\/a> but also serves as a dumping ground for all those YouTube videos you want to watch later, the podcast episodes you\u2019ll eventually listen to, the tweet threads you don\u2019t have time to scroll through yet, all those PDFs cluttering your desktop, and more. <\/p>\n My favorite thing about the app is that rather than just storing all that stuff in a reverse-chronological list, it acts as a sort of Google TV interface for web content, a tool that takes all your links and tries to give you back the right thing at the right time. Upnext\u2019s home screen shows you a few categories, a set of curated Daily Picks from the stuff you\u2019ve saved, and then a few of the things you\u2019ve added most recently. There\u2019s also a Review page that asks you to Tinder-swipe your way through your list to keep it clean \u2014 swipe right to keep it, swipe left to archive.<\/p>\n The app has been in beta for more than a year, and I\u2019ve been testing it off and on for most of that time. Now it\u2019s launching publicly on iPhone, iPad, and the web \u2014 Android\u2019s coming eventually, Seghers says, but not anytime soon. The app costs $10 a month or $69 a year, which is seriously steep for this kind of app (Pocket and Instapaper both have very good free tiers), but Seghers thinks Upnext can build something worth the price for the internet\u2019s content superconsumers. He didn\u2019t rule out eventually offering a cheaper or free version, either, but said that starting expensive \u201cwill give us a clear signal on what the most demanding users want.\u201d<\/p>\n
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