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What is Your Favorite RSS Reader?

Cyberhwk asks: "What is your favorite RSS reader? I've been trying to find a nice RSS reader. I am most intrested in an rss reader that can be run on OS X but I'm also intrested in Linux and Windows XP as well. I'm mostly interested in freeware because I'm currently going to college and I can't afford anything at the moment. So what do you use for an RSS reader? What does it run on? Most importantly is it free?"

14 of 91 comments (clear)

  1. Safari as an RSS reader by Kethinov · · Score: 3, Informative

    Safari will have RSS reading built into it with MacOS 10.4. There's your Mac solution. =P

    --
    You're right, I wouldn't steal a car. But if it were possible, I sure as hell would download one!
    1. Re:Safari as an RSS reader by SimplexO · · Score: 4, Informative

      Firefox will have RSS reading built into it by 1.0. There's your Mac/Linux/Windows solution. =P

      They call it livemarks and it autmatically picks up on sites that offer feeds. You can add a livemark by clicking on a button on an RSS/Atom Enabled website. It feels just like a folder of bookmarks (where each bookmark is an entry).

  2. Net News Wire by phUnBalanced · · Score: 3, Informative
    I've heard good things about Net News Wire. I believe there's a "Lite" free version.

    Not affiliated.

  3. FireFox Nightly by Professor+Cool+Linux · · Score: 5, Informative

    I use Livemarks. Everyone not using FF Nightlys will see in 1.0. It makes an rss into a folder in your bookmarks...

    "RSS feed integration into Firefox... specifically:

    - when a page is encountered that has the
    link tag in the display an icon in the status bar that opens an Add
    Bookmark dialog to add the feed as a bookmark.
    - RSS Feed bookmarks behave like folders in that they can be opened, showing the
    posts as bookmarks underneath. They should be immutable folders however (cannot
    cut, delete from them, cannot insert into them, drag operations blocked).
    - the major RSS formats should be supported (1.0 RDF, 2.0 XML etc)

    A suggested approach is to decorate such bookmarks with a flag, e.g.
    LIVE_BOOKMARK="true" and when the bookmarks datasource is asked for children of
    that container, it can see that it's a live bookmark and fetch the content.
    Caching of results can be implemented if there are update problems.

    As a side note Live Bookmarks are the perfect use case of Scheduled Update
    Notifications... they are files that change often and there's a real value in
    having the icon change subtly or something similar when there's a new post. This
    should not be seen as a pre-requisite for the former however.

    I'm not likely to get to this for 1.0 so I'm looking for help to implement...
    this would be a great project for someone to get their feet wet in RDF/Bookmarks
    code."
    -- Ben Goodger

    Source: http://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=244078 #c1

  4. a web based service by Masa · · Score: 4, Informative

    Bloglines

    It's a great reader. And always with me there, where I have an Internet connection.

  5. liferea is nice... and forumzilla... and opera by displague · · Score: 5, Informative

    Liferea has a clean gnome2 interface and supports atom.. I like it.

    I also use Forumzilla from Thunderbird. Opera supports rss directly in its mail client.

    --
    Marques Johansson
  6. Yahoo by stu72 · · Score: 3, Informative
    I don't have a huge amount of experience w/RSS but I'd like to point out that you can now include RSS feeds in your "My Yahoo" page, along with the plethora of news/weather/stock quotes/etc that you set up - it works for me.

    http://e.my.yahoo.com/config/promo_content?.module =ycontent

  7. Mozilla Firefox & Sage Extension by duffbeer703 · · Score: 4, Informative

    Both work really well for me!

    --
    Conformity is the jailer of freedom and enemy of growth. -JFK
  8. Bloglines by sitcoman · · Score: 4, Informative
    Bloglines.com is a great RSS aggregation service, which handles as many RSS feed as you want, lets you sort and search them, and makes it really easy (compared to others) to add any feed you find on the Net. It's free and of course it's available on any OS. It also means that you never miss an update when you're away from your home PC.

    And as a cherry on top, they have apps for all 3 major OS's that work with the website to notify you of updates when you're not using your browser. I don't personally use these helper apps though, so I can't vouch for them.

    In summation: you should check it out, it's great!

    --

    -=20
    me doesn't live for do [DEPRECATED]

  9. Slashdock! by millia · · Score: 3, Informative

    No, that's no typo. Slashdock is a dock-based RSS grabber. Works pretty darn good, author is helpful, and is very unobtrusive (or obtrusive, if you want it to be.) Used in conjunction with Camino, it makes for highly efficient browsing.
    Highly recommended.

    --
    stored on computers from birth to the grave
  10. RSS Bandit by prostoalex · · Score: 4, Informative

    RSS Bandit is good, I switched to it from SharpReader some time ago and never went back.

  11. Check out Sage or Sharpreader by nocent · · Score: 3, Informative
    Sage is an RSS reader extension for Mozilla Firefox. It doesn't aggregate and combine multiple feeds but it works well within Firefox.

    For Windows XP, Sharpreader is a good free aggregator. It can get slow if you have hundreds of feeds.

  12. Opera by NaDrew · · Score: 3, Informative
    The Opera browser now includes an RSS reader integrated with the M2 mail client.
    Subscribing to newsfeeds with Opera Mail is extremely simple, as most newsfeeds will automatically be subscribed when you click their links on a Web page. The feed will show up under "Newsfeeds" at the bottom of your "Mail" panel. Newsfeed items are presented and handled in the same manner as e-mail messages and Usenet news articles. This makes it easy to forward a newsfeed item by e-mail to a friend, access stored items using the search and "Quick find features", label particular items for later follow-up, and so forth.
    No need for a separate app. To subscribe to "Ask Slashdot", for example, just click this link (copied from the bottom of this page) and Opera's RSS reader will auto-discover the feed and add it to your list.
    --
    Vista:XPSP2::ME:98SE
  13. Re:RSS Reader for cellphone by steve.m · · Score: 3, Informative

    I've written one. Have a look here