![]() Do this enough and you can get to a point where it’s impossible to mark anything as read without unread articles slipping through the cracks.Īlso, it randomly failed to actually deliver articles on many days and the support team acted like this was an unfortunate but normal thing to happen. So if you read halfway through Monday’s articles, then all of them will appear in Tuesday’s download too. Inoreader for the best free reader with search and archiving. You can only mark articles as read by visiting a link. Feedly for the best all-around free feed RSS reader. Instapaper’s Kindle integration sends down every unread article every day. It’s enough to make me sad that I only have to use the site once every few weeks! ↩︎ The initial load is under half a second… from Senegal. The first time I used it I thought “man, this thing really just works!” And then, “man, I don’t remember the last time I said that about software with a graphical user interface!” It took me a while to figure out why, but then I realized that the site is absurdly technically minimalist: a ~2002-era multi-page webapp with no images and no Javascript. I also found myself really appreciating the Kindle4RSS app. ![]() ![]() Instapaper sounds like they have a feature like this, but it works terribly. Hilariously, it’s so much faster and less complicated than almost every “modern web app” that it might be the best web-based RSS reader as well. You can also read RSS feeds directly on the Kindle4RSS site. There’s a sweet feature where it can extract the full text of summary-only feeds so that you don’t have to read them in the crappy Kindle browser. It’s well worth the “$2.9” per month for me. You need the premium version to send articles daily (vs manually) or to have over 25 feeds. Get the information you need with Fedreader quickly, easy, and affordably. It makes me a lot less likely to bounce off a doorstopper from, say, samzdat. Feedreader is the best personal desk RSS around reader around. On Feedly it’s easy for me to tab away and get distracted on a Kindle, everything has my full attention. It lets you know when it finds new content, keeps track of what you. The option to enhance it with plug-ins makes Awasu a particularly powerful aggregator. This feature-rich RSS reader is kept up to date and can monitor many data sources even if a feed is not available. You can use it to view updates on any topic you're interested in, whether they come from the news, blogs, social media posts, RSS feeds, or other sources. Awasu Personal Edition monitors any site that provides an RSS or Atom feed. Most interestingly, I’ve also been appreciating the reading more. Feedly is a robust feed reader that aggregates information from around the web into one convenient place. So far, it’s been really awesome-simple and completely non-addictive. Kindle4RSS bundles up each day’s articles into a single Kindle “magazine issue” and sends it to me once a day at a predictable time. To escape, I decided to experiment with reading RSS feeds on my Kindle via Kindle4RSS. Feedreader Online is an RSS aggregator for you to read and organize news and updates from all your favourite websites in one place. I was still under the thumb of the little red badge! But recently I noticed that my RSS feed was starting to get the same distracting pull as Hacker News. I really enjoy using RSS to get updates from my favorite writers.
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