Ahhh this looks interesting and I was just telling my therapist that I want to cut out more social media without compromising at least general understanding of what's going on in the world. But...
Ahhh this looks interesting and I was just telling my therapist that I want to cut out more social media without compromising at least general understanding of what's going on in the world.
But it's iOS only :(
Anyone have any Android Feeds? I've tried Feedly and it's alright, I guess I also don't know what RSS feeds to even attempt to follow lol.
I use feeder because it doesn't ask to make an account, it's all localy stored, and it's supposed to be FOSS ( haven't checked) . I keep my phone for a very long time, so i don't mind manually...
I use feeder because it doesn't ask to make an account, it's all localy stored, and it's supposed to be FOSS ( haven't checked) . I keep my phone for a very long time, so i don't mind manually reentering my feeds when I change device. Works great too.
Another vote here for Feeder. Also, you can export your feeds to a file and import them on a new device for easier transfers. Worked really well last time I reset my phone.
Another vote here for Feeder. Also, you can export your feeds to a file and import them on a new device for easier transfers. Worked really well last time I reset my phone.
I use Readup, but you still have to use the old add-on collection trick if you want to get the Firefox extension working. They did recently set up a version of the site for e-ink devices, which...
I use Readup, but you still have to use the old add-on collection trick if you want to get the Firefox extension working.
They did recently set up a version of the site for e-ink devices, which doesn't require an extension to work and should work on Android, but it's still in early development and a bit buggy.
Something similar that recently got funded is Project Tapestry, which is being made by the former developers of the popular iOS Twitter client Twitterrific (which interestingly was the origin of...
Something similar that recently got funded is Project Tapestry, which is being made by the former developers of the popular iOS Twitter client Twitterrific (which interestingly was the origin of the term “tweet” in the context of Twitter).
I'm surprised there aren't more apps like this, where you can scroll through a variety of sources, given how much basically every social media site has pivoted to an infinite-feed interface.
I'm surprised there aren't more apps like this, where you can scroll through a variety of sources, given how much basically every social media site has pivoted to an infinite-feed interface.
Ahhh this looks interesting and I was just telling my therapist that I want to cut out more social media without compromising at least general understanding of what's going on in the world.
But it's iOS only :(
Anyone have any Android Feeds? I've tried Feedly and it's alright, I guess I also don't know what RSS feeds to even attempt to follow lol.
I really like Newsblur, for an Android app.
For feeds to follow, check out ooh.directory!
Your first link redirects to this page btw!
Woops, thanks for the tip!
I use feeder because it doesn't ask to make an account, it's all localy stored, and it's supposed to be FOSS ( haven't checked) . I keep my phone for a very long time, so i don't mind manually reentering my feeds when I change device. Works great too.
Another vote here for Feeder. Also, you can export your feeds to a file and import them on a new device for easier transfers. Worked really well last time I reset my phone.
For web based RSS reader, BazQux is what I use.
I use Readup, but you still have to use the old add-on collection trick if you want to get the Firefox extension working.
They did recently set up a version of the site for e-ink devices, which doesn't require an extension to work and should work on Android, but it's still in early development and a bit buggy.
Something similar that recently got funded is Project Tapestry, which is being made by the former developers of the popular iOS Twitter client Twitterrific (which interestingly was the origin of the term “tweet” in the context of Twitter).
I'm surprised there aren't more apps like this, where you can scroll through a variety of sources, given how much basically every social media site has pivoted to an infinite-feed interface.