Take a look at the video above, and you’ll see that the iPhone version of RockMelt looks a lot different from the RockMelt desktop browser. Its mission is carried over nicely to the iPhone, though, where social media takes center stage, even requiring you to log into Facebook when you first launch the app.
After that, you can add your Twitter account and a variety of website feeds that make this browser work like an RSS reader. If you’re reading an article and, for example, have to board a plane without Wi-Fi, you can save that article for later.
And if you’re a user of the RockMelt browser on Mac or PC, everything you do is in the cloud, so whatever happens on the iPhone version is also visible on any devices running RockMelt.
Here’s the best news yet: It’s free.