Save the link in one motion
Use the browser extension, the share sheet on mobile, or paste it straight into your inbox. A preview and summary get generated automatically.
Use case
Mozilla shut Pocket down in 2025 and took years of saved articles with it. Luckynote is a home for the same habit: save a link, read it when you have time, then use search that still works after you forget the title.
For over a decade, Pocket was the default answer to "I do not have time to read this now." Its shutdown in 2025 left a real gap: a straightforward way to save an article or link, keep a clean queue, and come back to it later without losing the habit that made saving effortless in the first place.
Luckynote is built to be that home. Save a link the moment you find it, through the browser extension, a share sheet, or by sending it to your inbox, and it keeps a preview, a summary, and full-text search so the queue never becomes a graveyard.
Use the browser extension, the share sheet on mobile, or paste it straight into your inbox. A preview and summary get generated automatically.
Come back to your saved links whenever suits you, with no queue-zero pressure and no algorithmic feed deciding what surfaces.
Months later, search a phrase from the article, not just the title. Luckynote-generated summaries and keywords make old saves findable again.
You only want a simple reading queue and nothing else, with no notes, tasks, or files attached to what you save.
Your Pocket saves were either research, work reference, or something you needed to act on. Luckynote keeps the link and the follow-up together.
Rather than migrating a full export, most former Pocket users start fresh in Luckynote and paste back only the handful of links they still care about.
The fast capture habit is the headline, but these details are what make it reliable every day.
Turn any saved message into a to-do so follow-up lives beside the note, link, or screenshot that created it.
Snooze anything for later when it matters more next week, tomorrow, or right before a deadline.
Record a quick voice note and Luckynote transcribes it so the idea becomes searchable text later.
Search text inside screenshots, slide photos, receipts, and saved images instead of relying on filenames.
Saved links keep useful context with summaries, captions, and keywords so you can skim what mattered faster.
Mark the items you know you will want back soon without forcing a full organizing session.
Use folders when you want them, not before you can save something. Capture first, add structure later.
Save pages, images, and snippets from the browser in one click instead of leaving tabs open as reminders.
Capture from your phone too, with iPhone and Android apps that keep the same inbox and search everywhere.
Search by what you remember in your own words, even when you forgot the exact title, site, or format.
Mozilla discontinued Pocket in 2025. The apps and website stopped working, leaving former users to find a new place to save links for later.
It covers the core habit: save a link, read it later, and find it again. It also adds notes, files, tasks, and Luckynote search on top, so it grows past a pure reading queue if you want it to.
Yes. The browser extension and share sheet work on any page, saving a preview and summary so the link stays useful even without the original page.
This page does not claim an automatic importer. The practical path is to keep your export safe and bring over links that still matter, then use Luckynote for new saves going forward.
Yes, there is a free plan to start with. Paid plans add more storage and advanced search features from $5/month.
Keep the fast capture habit, but give yourself a better place to return to later.