Any guidance for getting started with RSS feeds? Suggestions, softwares, what makes you enjoy yours, and how your keep it curated?

  • Lost_Wanderer@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    Well, figuring out the sources you want to have in your RSS Feeder is a you task. Gotta know your interests. Find news sites or blogs of those interests and sub their RSS feed.

    I use android and use Feeder from the F-droid app store.

  • shiftleft@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    I currently use Feedly (its proprietary though)… I have in mind switching to my own instance of FreshRSS which looks awesome and has its mobile compatible apps too.

    I would also like to mention two little tricks that made my life easier with RSS:

    • First RSSHub: it allows you to made a RSS feed out of almost anything! RSS can be awesome…
    • Second, in GitHub if you append ‘.atom’ to any relases of a repostory you get a RSS feed for releases (which I use to track different releases) for example for lemmy https://github.com/LemmyNet/lemmy/releases.atom

    Hope this helps!

  • Matt@netmonkey.tech
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    1 year ago

    It would probably be helpful if others knew what platforms you preferred to use. 🙂

    If you’re in Apple’s ecosystem, I’m personally fond of Reeder.

  • hbar@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    I use the Feeder Android app, it’s simple and easy to get set up.

  • MerrickGreen@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    If you’re on Apple platforms you can try NetNewsWire. Comes with a Safari extension that you can use to easily add a feed and it syncs with iCloud and/or Feedly. Edit: grammar

  • sj_zero@lotide.fbxl.net
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    1 year ago

    I’m using nextcloud news. What I like about it is it keeps track of the news I’ve read and not read across all my devices, so I can be assured I’m not seeing the exact same news just because I switch from my phone to my desktop to my laptop.

    For podcasts, I don’t like it as much but nextcloud music has become my go-to app.

    I’m really a big fan of nextcloud in general. Honestly, it just does so many things very well that I tend to keep just using it for different tasks. Incidentally, another really cool feature is I have an asustor nas, and you can set up nextcloud on it without any extra steps. I didn’t do that because I’m hosting everything myself, but knowing you can have a setup like that is really top notch.

  • JC@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    @lunar2m7 I was in the same boat recently. I searched for a service that I controlled. I wanted it to be centralized where I could read it on my phone or on any computer and the read articles would sync.
    The best solution I found is Nextcoud News. There’s an android app and it seems to be able to sync with some desktop clients (didn’t try yet).
    Im happy with it now.

  • dmje@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    @lunar2m7 I’d go Feedly. Really frictionless and free. Then you can either just use the site itself or if you want software - you can either use their official app or find a compatible reader. I use Reeder (https://reederapp.com/) on both my Mac and iPhone which is lovely, clean, also talks to instapaper - I don’t know what there is on Windows/Linux/Android but there probably will be some pretty nice clients.

  • un_ax@lemmy.sdf.org
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    1 year ago

    I selfhost a copy of Commafeed since it matches my workflow back when Google Reader existed.

    It’s browser based so it syncs my read status, has categories, article focused, and some basic content inlining.

    I find RSS works best for me when it’s some content that I want to see everything for. If a source I follow only updates once a year I want to make sure I don’t miss it. Or if I want to ignore a source for a month and come back to it later I can do that too.

  • David@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    I’m self-hosting Tiny Tiny RSS mostly for podcasts and previously also some Reddit subs I was particularly interested in. TTRSS works well for me in that it’s OS independent and has phone app for easy listening on the go.

  • jmp242@sopuli.xyz
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    1 year ago

    On the linux or windows desktop, you can use Thunderbird or Vivaldi - both have a RSS feed option. On the linux systems there’s Akregator which seems simpler to me just being focused on RSS. That said, I’m literally only using RSS to track new blog posts from Vivaldi for update releases for work purposes, so IDK about “more normal use”.

  • mizmoose@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    I use NewsBlur. It’s sometimes clunky adding an RSS feed but the way you can organize things and do 101 settings is terrific. It’s for-pay though (around $30/year? I think) so that may not interest you. But I find it does far more than the free stuff that I tried.