Basic authentication support to read password protected feeds Article headline view for quick skimming Can export feed subscriptions to an OPML file Can import feed subscriptions from an OPML file
Works well with high frequency update feeds Keyboard shortcuts (similar to Google Reader) Custom feed specific number of items to store User interface themes: Light, Dark, Aqua, Sepia, Chill Read any feeds that your computer can access (also in your company intranet, not only public Internet) 'Show only unread items' option helps you to read only what is new Flexible "mark as read" options (when article title is shown, when article bottom is shown, manually) Drag & drop support for organizing feeds and folders in the tree navigator Organizes feeds into folders (+ read all items in folder at once) Finds feeds from web pages and makes it very easy to subscribe to new feeds IFTTT support! (enables email & SMS notifications, workflow automation) Rules also support desktop notifications and sound effects. Built-in Rule Engine lets you define rules for filtering, border highlighting, auto-bookmarking, tagging, hiding and regexp highlighting articles.
Can convert partial feeds to feeds with full articles with a built-in Readability style conversion engine! Multiple viewing modes: full article view, headlines view, headlines + one article (Opera RSS reader style), newspaper view, magazine view Built-in Social Media plugin support (Youtube, Youtube Search, Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, VK, LinkedIn Groups, LinkedIn home feed, LinkedIn Jobs, LinkedIn hashtag feed, Yammer, Bitchute, Vimeo, SlideShare, Pinterest, Reddit, Telegram, Rumble, Dribbble, eBay (4.12.0+)) Full standalone feed reader (RSS, Atom, RDF) as a Firefox/Chrome/Vivaldi extension - no online services needed We believe privacy is important so that only you know what sources you follow. Therefore it is vital to learn new things every day and follow relevant and valuable sources of information effortlessly. We believe that the faster you learn, gain new knowledge and information the better you will succeed in life as an individual and as an organization.
We believe that all the new information that you are interested in, should be automatically aggregated into one place from various sources you care about (both Internet and intranet) into easy-to-read format and automatically filtered based on the rules you define. We believe it is waste of valuable time to spend minutes or even hours every day to go through dozens of websites, blogs, news sites and social media sites manually. Loading those excerpts and images just takes time I don’t have.We believe time is our most valuable asset. I’m familiar enough with these websites that I know they’re worth bookmarking and keeping an eye on. I have to judge from the titles alone whether a post is worth reading. Unlike an online feed reader, this method does not display any excerpts or images from the posts. You can now read the feed directly from your bookmarks bar:Īs you probably noticed, you can organize these links into folders, just like ordinary bookmarks: Which will bring up the “Subscribe with Live Bookmark” option: In that case, click on the “View Feed XML”: Occasionally, however, you’ll be redirected to a website with a variety of subscribe options. Go ahead and select your “Feeds” folder in your bookmark bar: In other words, you will bookmark this feed: Generally, you will get a pop-up window that asks you to “Subscribe with Live Bookmark”. Here’s what it looks like on the Moodle News website: Now, navigate to the site in question and look for their RSS feed icon. First, create a folder called “Feeds” in your bookmark bar. Instead, I use Firefox as my feed reader. You can use online readers such as Google Reader or Bloglines, but I don’t have that kind of time. Instead, I simply follow their RSS feed.Īn RSS feed is a list of recent posts from a website. Of course, I don’t have the time or energy to go through each one every day or even every week. Yes, you read that correctly: several hundred. I’m online a lot: there are probably two dozen or so websites that I read regularly another fifty or so that I read intermittently, and several hundred that I keep an eye on.