What RSS reader are you using ? Why ?
>>54966367
Feeddemon
>2011
>rss
lel
Opera Mail
>why
It's built into my browser
tfw rss is rip
>>54966533
>>54966578
Podcasts
a cool new rss reader I found was https://github.com/swanson/stringer
They have one click deploy to heroku free, and claim is works fine
>>54966533
>>54966578
How is it dead ? What has replaced it ? How do you check new content on sites you like without manually checking each of them ?
>>54966367
>>54966367
>Firefox
I use an extention called bamboo and because it's not signed, the only way I can use it is in nightly
It's free, updates are instant and it has a podcast player
the issue is that it is not developed anymore and there is a bug where old updates will show up as new eventually, but about only 1 or 2
if I had money, I would probably use feedly
>Android
I use gReader, it's pretty nice and has a lot of features and has fast updates, like within 5 minutes I believe
there is a premium version that I dont use though but you can connected it to feedly if you have an account and if you read something on your browser, it would sync and vice versa
>>54966367
I use the one built into Safari.
>>54966367
Feedly on desktop & mobile.
>>54966367
tt-rss, the only right answer
Does a RSS reader which is both self-hosted and local exist ? Like you could sync your feed list with your server (making it centralized and so easier to sync between machines) but your feed list would then be stored locally so you can update it even when you don't have access to your server.
QuiteRSS