Its been some time since this question was asked. Every RSS reader I've used so far sucks. Either the built-in web support is poor or it stops fetching the feeds or renders then poorly. Sorry for my frustration, but I would like to know what everyone else is using and if they are satisfied with their RSS reader.
I have been using RSS since early 2000s and currently I am settled on Feedly.
> Either the built-in web support is poor or it stops fetching the feeds or renders then poorly.
I guess I am good with Feedly, and Google Reader and everything before that, is because I dont use the RSS Reader to read the content. I am only using RSS as News Headline [1]. And then will either Command Click, Right Click Open New Tab, Simply Click on it, depending on which OS and browser I am using to open them in a new Tab inside Browser.
Which is also the reason why I could end up with hundreds of tabs open. And I read them one by one. For these type of heavy browsing usage I recommend Firefox > Chrome > Safari.
So for my usage I actually think RSS should be a function inside a browser. But I know a lot of people use RSS reader differently.
[1] Which is also how I use Twitter as well. I simply have a list of people I follow and read those list only. So for me I dont ever understand why people are so upset with the For You Tab. But I guess I am the minority and I use it differently.
i used to use feedly, as they were first out the gate after google reader shut down (word on the street was they had a headsup), but they jacked the pricing and introduced a bunch of needless extra features that i couldn’t turn off, so now i use inoreader.
I just checked them up and 150 RSS feeds on free account isn't enough for my usage.
If they have been around for this long and the limit was the same over the years it is likely the reason why I passed them when switching from Google Reader.
I've been using inoreader since.... (checks email)... 2015! Good service, mobile app is decent and I haven't had to worry about switching or anything and its almost been a decade.
I love that I can pull whole articles. I wrote https://markdown.download for llm use, but mostly ended up using it with miniflux to fetch full articles from problematic sites
True, but I want to use RSS on non-Apple devices as well. So I was looking for something with a web interface. That’s also why I’m still using the classic version
I've been using Inoreader for a few years now and I'm pretty happy with it. Its reliability and feature set is the right balance for me. I've written about its pros and cons [1], the main pros for me are:
- Very smooth experience between web, android, and iOS apps (I’m mentioning this first, as many other apps I’ve tried are flaky)
- Mark as read while scrolling (Very useful for quickly shortlisting items from the feed. This is probably the main reason I’ve been able to replace Inoreader with social media apps.)
- Rules to auto-delete duplicated items or if the title contains specific words.
After Google Reader was shut down, I found TTRSS and use it since then.
It works and there are some great extensions like FeedIron available to process RSS feeds before the will integrated into the UI
Feedbin as a backend and Reeder Classic on Mac and iOS for Reading. I'm pretty satisfied with that setup.
One does not really need a backend, but I have far too many feeds, plus Feedbin has a email feature which transforms newsletters into feeds. Also nice: Since this year there is a feature for broken feeds: Feedbin does some URL spelunking as to find a different URL on the same domain.
I use Reeder Classic instead of last years "New Reeder" because they have different paradigms: Classic has the bookmark folder with numbers structure, whereas the new Reeder has timeline/River of News paradigm without read/unread bits. That works for social media, but not for my case of subscribing to blogs which publish seldom. The author has promised to keep Reeder Classic current for the time being. Fingers crossed.
If Reeder Classic goes dead I either look into Unread or NetNewswire. The latter would be a homecoming – NNW was my first Feedreader back in 2003 or so. If Feedbin goes dead, I'd look maybe into a self-hosted backend or go backend-less.
Even without a container it's pretty easy to run PHP with a HTTP server like Caddy, there's no need for any extra configuration aside from passing the required directives in the server config for your setup. You can find many examples in the docs.
Same here. I self-host it since 3 years and didn't feel the need to change it. A stable application which doesn't have any problems which OP mentioned.
I use it as a PWA on mobile.
I've used RSS since Google Reader, then Feedly, then Flipboard. I eventually got more concerned about privacy and moved to self-hosting. I tried a few tools, built some, and ended up with NextCloud's News app, but when I built my own alternative to NextCloud [1], I made sure to build a "better version" of what I wanted from an RSS reader. If the feed has a short summary, it fetches the whole article and strips out all HTML, and if I want to read more, I can jump to the website/article, otherwise it's usually good enough for me.
I also try to never follow more than 10 feeds (right now I'm at 12 because a couple only publish 2-3x year). I only have a few really interesting things to read every day. FOMO was real when I started doing this years ago with NextCloud, but I learned to deal with that. I love this setup.
I’m selfhosting both miniflux (after being a paying customer for a while) and freshrss. Main reason for adding freshrss was to test the flaresolverr plugin. I haven’t been able to get it to work, but I kept using freshrss.
If you’re interested in how well-behaved your client is, you can read Rachel’s posts.
Back in the day I used r2e, which was an old python scrip for the same purpose.
I actually removed it primarily because it was the last package on my system at the time to need python, and removing it let me purge a whole bunch of python packages and save a lot of space!
These days I still read feeds via RSS, via a static golang binary. It lets me do filtering, and similar things:
I've used almost all of the ones listed including rolling my own RSS to ePub script. I've been using Readwise Reader lately which has been a great blend of vimish keys, read it later, tagging, and AI summaries.
I self host tiny tiny rss (tt-rss) in my home lab and access it using Firefox. Then I read articles with the Firefox reader view. Being visually impaired I like the larger text available.
For me it's Thunderbird, "Blogs & News Feeds" section. After version 120-something it stopped resizing images on article load - this is the part I find unsatisfying. Otherwise it just works.
I used to host Miniflux using my leftover Heroku student credits. But about 1 month ago I started to respect the work that writers put into their website design, so I have no use for the inbuilt reader anymore. Made the switch to https://scour.ing/, it's a feed crawler in my opinion, pretty much under development but good enough for my simple use case.
"Feeder" on Android. Built-in web is the Android web client. But I let it open the links with Firefox anyway. I just use the RSS Reader to get the list, actual reading I do in the Browser.
I've been using email since the Google Reader shutdown. The short versions is that I filter (almost all) feeds into a few folders that have no notifications. Now I have a offline-first reader that is already synced to all of my devices.
I’ve been using Feedbin since Google Reader shut down. Been very happy with it. I access it through the web on desktop and using Reeder 4 on iOS; both work well.
I used to use FreshRSS, but there were some minor pain points that eventually pushed me to find an alternative. Miniflux has been great so far. It's very minimalistic, which also makes it very lightweight to self-host, as I do, but you can also subscribe to the hosted version for about a dollar a month.
Self-hosted FreshRSS, NetNewsWire on Mac, Fluent reader on linux/windows/ios. Any reader compatible with Google Reader API works with FreshRSS, and Fluent was the nicest UI I've seen (hasn't been updated recently, but I don't need new features).
Big RSS user. Loved Google Reader till it shut down, then switched to Feedly which I liked well enough, but it keeps cramming in business features I don’t need. Switched to Inoreader last year and have loved it. Writing this comment in its web view right now.
Nextcloud News, still using v24.0 - which is no longer supported but for which I made a patch to make it work in current Nextcloud versions - instead of the current v25.0 rewrite since the former is functionally superior over the latter for my use case.
I self host freshrss (https://www.freshrss.org/), super easy to set up via docker and it doesn't required some over provisioned dependency setup (DB servers, etc...). It has nice/familiar keyboard shortcuts and a clean and fast interface. My only complaint is that the cloudflare-ifiation (aka enshittification) that is slowly ruining and rotting the internet prevents the fetching of RSS feeds from some news sites from your presumably affordable non hyperscaler VPS instance.
When using mobile I use https://capyreader.com/ which has first class intigration with freshrss; meaning you can add/remove/view feeds via the app and have the changes sync with freshrss. Also, probably my favorite feature of capy reader, is that when you want to view the content of an rss article that is only a summary or headline (because few people publish the full content of their articles in the rss feed anymore), you can just press a button and it will fetch it for you and display it in the reader without sending you to a browser. So much happier and more accurately informed since moving back to RSS where I can choose what I want to see vs having it filtered/fed to me via some biased algorithm.
I use the freshrss web interface on my phone, that works quite well I feel. The app might not be necessary.
BTW, Freshrss also has a function to fetch the full article content directly. I think it's not especially clever, just uses a selector, but worked well for me for the one or two feeds where I enabled it.
Oh nice! I didn't know that FreshRSS could do that via the web app, that was pretty much the only reason I used the capy reader app. I'll have to test it out, thanks!
I'm using Sage-Like. A Firefox addon. My preferred method of use is reviewing the RSS headlines and reading the article in the browser and Sage-Like is perfect for this as it is a sidebar addon.
A big fuck you to rssDaemon on Android which came out with a 3.x to 4.0 update that nuked all my feeds (this was a few years ago. I switched to Feedly and it's been great.
I use NetNewsWire on Apple’s platforms and Mozilla Thunderbird on Windows. Both are free. Thunderbird is a bit more…unrefined…compared to NetNewsWire, but it works fine.
I’ve been using the following RSS aggregators since the mid-2000s:
* Google Reader – until it was shut down.
* The Old Reader – from early 2015 until I became dissatisfied with its lack of features. I was a paying user, and while the developer was always courteous over email, no amount of feedback convinced them to add functionalities that had become standard among competitors, such as filtering by keywords.
* Bazqux – since a week after the November 2024 U.S. election. For my own mental health, I decided to filter out any news containing keywords like "Trump" or "Elon", and it has worked great so far.
How I Read My Feeds:
* On my laptop, I actually enjoy using Bazqux on the web, though I slightly customize its CSS using Stylus.
* On iOS, I use FeeddlerPro, which previously served me well when connected to my The Old Reader subscription.
Evaluations & Alternatives:
* During my search for the right RSS aggregator back in November, I evaluated Feedbin, Feedbro, Feedly, Inoreader, NetNewsWire, NewsBlur, ReadKit, and a few others.
* One bridge I haven’t crossed yet is consuming YouTube via RSS. Since every channel already has an RSS feed, this approach would allow me to filter videos by keywords as well.
Feedbro is great. It has none of the arbitrary limitations that many of the web-clients impose for monetisation reasons.
The only downside (or upside depending on your perspective) is that it is a local solution. You can only access it on a specific device, and it won't be syncing when that device is turned off.
Elfeed on Emacs, on Linux and Windows. I tried several RSS readers for years, then, being an Emacs user myself, I gave Elfeed a go and never looked back. One key binding to open full articles in Emacs EWW (for those feeds providing only previews), and one to play media with mpv and yt-dlp. Best solution ever (for me) to get daily disenshittified web contents.
On mobile, there is nothing I like, I consider Feeder on Android the least bad.
I use Reeder Classic on iOS and the Mac (the pre-enshittified version that does not have a subscription model). I will likely stick to it until it’s completely unsupported (which it isn’t), although a key part of the experience for me is read item syncing via Feedly.
I also use Feeder for Android on my Supernote Nomad. It has the nice side benefit of creating EPUBs I can save/annotate/share.
I’ve also got a soft spot for NetNewsWire, but don’t really use it since the above works for me to skim the equivalent of 200+ feeds over breakfast (I’m posting this from inside Reeder on my iPad mini).
> Either the built-in web support is poor or it stops fetching the feeds or renders then poorly.
I guess I am good with Feedly, and Google Reader and everything before that, is because I dont use the RSS Reader to read the content. I am only using RSS as News Headline [1]. And then will either Command Click, Right Click Open New Tab, Simply Click on it, depending on which OS and browser I am using to open them in a new Tab inside Browser.
Which is also the reason why I could end up with hundreds of tabs open. And I read them one by one. For these type of heavy browsing usage I recommend Firefox > Chrome > Safari.
So for my usage I actually think RSS should be a function inside a browser. But I know a lot of people use RSS reader differently.
[1] Which is also how I use Twitter as well. I simply have a list of people I follow and read those list only. So for me I dont ever understand why people are so upset with the For You Tab. But I guess I am the minority and I use it differently.
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