• Ben@lemmy.world
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    2 years ago

    Inoreader works very nicely for me. I have quite a few folders set up… Stuff I had bookmarks for, but rarely visited lately…

    • Digg Top Stories (43 unread) if I get bored - at least a dozen of those will keep me entertained.

    Stuff from the ‘other’ place - useful fodder to consider ‘bridging’ or just ‘copy/pasting’ over in Fediverse :P

    I added the Firefox extension, so if I visit Youtube - for example (open this in a PRIVATE window, not logged in) Insights from Ukraine and Russia then I can Easily add the RSS by searching in Inoreader.

    Here’s Daily Dose of Internet

    The beauty being that you can quickly go through all this stuff - great keyboard accessibility (90% covered with Shift J-K to go to the next/previous feed, Shift-X to toggle expansion of the folder, J - K to go (and mark read) the next/previous item (but you can ALWAYS view all articles in a thread)… all without visiting the sites.

    Feedly and Inoreader are both awesome - and you can (and should regularly) export a list of your feeds as a backup/migration strategy.

      • Ben@lemmy.world
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        2 years ago

        RSS is one of the oldest protocols existing. Basically it’s like a feed with links to things posted…

        I’d suggest you start with Feedly or Inoreader, make an account and take a look.

        For me, it means that I can see notifications (Inoreader) telling me how many unread items have occurred across the 79 websites I added as feeds.

        • I have a folder for ‘Fediverse’ with feeds like Lemmy - ukraine (also Reddit’s r/ukraine).

        • I have a ‘Linux’ folder, containing a few interesting blogs - like Niccolo’s KDE developer blog, a few news sites, plus announcements from my OS forum.

        • I have a ‘News’ folder with various sources (one is a journalist I know with a Facebook page - as I don’t use Facebook).

        • I have a ‘Video’ folder

        • I have a ‘Time Waster’ folder which has things like Digg, WindowSwap, Drive & Listen

        Basically, any time you make an account and request updates from a website, the same can be done with NO account and simply copying the RSS link.

        It gives you updates on things you don’t need to bother bookmarking or opening to follow.

        • Osayidan@social.vmdk.ca
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          2 years ago

          I used to have RSS for everything but noticed over the past 10 years or so fewer and fewer places even bother to offer up an official feed. For a while I used 3rd party apps or self hosted scripts to force generate a valid rss feed but eventually gave up. Been 4-5 years now since I’ve logged into my feedly account (which was migrated from google reader, good times).

        • bruzie@lemmy.nz
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          2 years ago

          I’m still bitter about bloglines shutting down. I tried thisoldreader and inoreader but it never felt the same. Then I found reddit.

      • norb@infosec.pub
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        2 years ago

        RSS stands for Really Simple Syndication.

        Back when blogs were a bigger thing, they would be setup with RSS to “push out” notifications when new posts were published. (Technically your RSS client pulls the RSS feeds but the end result is the same - the feed is just a list of posts basically).

        You open up your RSS client or site and there will be a list of sites you’re “following” and any new posts they’ve made.

        Plenty of sites still support RSS. A lot of readers can pull the RSS feed automatically if you just give them the site URL/web address.

        My personal choice is NewsBlur which is at https://NewsBlur.com. You can get a free account there to try it out.

    • red@feddit.deOP
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      2 years ago

      Feedly is great, use it for my private RSS stuff.

      At work, on macos, I use rssbot - which isn’t an RSS reader but just an … uhm … rss linker? It doesn’t feature the capability to read content but just gives you a list of links to anything new. If that’s enough for you, it’s a great app.