Procrastinote:
Why read it now, when you can read it later?
Everyone saves articles for later and then forgets why they saved them. To solve this, other apps ask you to add tags to every article, or to drag them into a special folder, or color code them with a label, or some other shit that’s way more complex than that.
Meanwhile, you could have used all the time you spent dealing with their organizational scheme to just read the damn article.
I wanted a simpler app.
- A reverse-chronological list of saved articles
- A note to remind you how long ago you saved it
- A short summary of the article
- A reminder of why it is interesting
- A TL;DR in case you decide not to go back
So that’s what I built. To save an article, you click on the menu bar item and paste the link or you click the built-in Safari web clipper to save it right from your browser.
End of story.
Procrastinote requires MacOS 26 Tahoe. The app uses Tahoe’s built-in Foundations Model to summarize the article and decide whether it’s interesting. It also uses Liquid Glass in its styling and iCloud to sync across Macs.
Yes, it uses aI
Every link you save in Procastinote is read by Apple’s on-device AI model, then summarized using a personality that you select.










The AI also assigns each article to a category and suggests how long you should procrastinate before reading the article: Kinda Soon, Later, or Much Later.
Finally, it provides you with a TL;DR for each link, just in case you end up not going back to read the whole thing.
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