(I used that to be in the loop on breaking information on specific upcoming products.) You can also set up feeds based on Google News searches, or just keyword searches that will search all feeds that Feedly knows about and put articles that hit the search criteria into your feed. You can also subscribe to public Twitter accounts or YouTube channels and they will show up in the feed as well. ![]() It will then generate a feed based on that so new articles or whatever will be caught and injected into the feed. You click a link on that page and it generates a CSS selector to find similar links on the page. You give it a URL and it gives you a page preview. "Read later" bookmarks or article categorization gets synced between the two, of course.įeedly also recently introduced an "RSS feed generator" function which is great for sites that do not offer RSS feeds. I'm very invested in RSS to keep up on various things and being able to get to the same feed from my desktop or from my phone is very handy. I generally prefer desktop apps over cloud services, but in this case I rather like having a cloud service. It is a paid product, but I just paid for a lifetime license so I'm not doing a monthly fee or anything. They presented a similar interface with the same keyboard shortcuts, so it was an easy transition. I switched over to Feedly after Google Reader died. So I just used what was built into my browser that seemed good enough. I joined the RSS bandwagon late, and the general impression I got was that Google Reader was the best and everyone sort of stopped talking about RSS after it disappeared. Opera does a better job of letting me know that there are updates via toast notifications I sometimes forget about my feeds if I don't use Opera for a while.īut I haven't really explored the market much, especially the standalone market. In both cases, I like that they're integrated with the browser. They both allow various labeling options Vivaldi has nice e-mail forwarding of RSS info that I haven't really used yet. ![]() ![]() Vivaldi's probably the better one at this point due to more HTML/CSS capabilities when rendering, but I haven't fully migrated. They have similar three-column interfaces and features. I'm half-migrated between Opera Presto's integrated reader, and Vivaldi's new integrated reader. One of the essential pieces of a modern Internet suite, what's your favorite RSS/Atom feed reader?
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