the subbox is and has been bad for a long time which is why i switched to using feedly a rss reader instead and i can only recommend it.
here is how you export your subscriptions:
It says very clearly in their terms of service they are collecting your browser's cookies, pixels tags and other meta data to better serve you relevant content. https://feedly.com/i/legal/privacy If they are collecting that data without permission though (you haven't allowed access to that data for the app) that's another story.
Hol dir feedly (oder andere RSS Reader) und füttere es mit RSS feeds deiner Wahl. Sei es FAZ, SZ, Deutschlandfunk, die Welt, Heise, Handelsblatt, ntv, SPON, tagesschau, taz, Zeit online, etc.
Össze tudsz állítani magadnak hírcsatornákat hírforrásokból. Pl napi hírek, sport, tudományos, stb...
Van ennek fizetős verziója is, ahol egy mesterséges intelligencia szelektálja a különböző forrásokból érkező, de azonos híreket és csak az egyiket tartja meg.
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Az ingyenes verziónál a az elmúlt napon legtöbbet olvasott 3 cikket emeli ki a folyamodból. Szóval ha reggel meg este ránézel, akkor kb. lefedi a legfontosabbakat.
Here's what I've got in my Feedly currently: https://imgur.com/a/w5TrhwJ
I really recommend feedly, it's basically what Google Reader used to be, so just a good online RSS reader.
Sortiere Quellen, auch Quellen die eher im rechten oder linken Spektrum liegen + einige Englische, mit Feedly (kostenloser Version, obwohl in Zukunft könnte ich mir auch vorstellen Premium zu holen) und log mich da 2-3 mal täglich ein um mir halt einen Überblick zu verschaffen was die Menschen so bewegt.
Außerdem bin ich durch r/de auch aufmerksam geworden auf https://www.bpb.de/shop/ und hole mir dort ab und zu Bücher (sind ja sehr günstig für die Qualität, oftmals bei 4,50) um die größeren langfristigeren Zusammenhänge zu verstehen.
Edit: Siehe olandandgreat's Kommentar, Zeit nutzen um wichtigeres anzuvisieren und "um Bücher zu lesen, um Nachrichten auch richtig einordnen und bewerten zu können" dafür ist bpb.de/shop wirklich toll, natürlich nicht die einzige Quelle um tolle Bücher übers politische Weltgeschehen zu finden, aber doch eine die meiner Meinung nach sehr Erwähnenswert ist.
You can also just use any rss reader (feedly is a popular choice) to subscribe to the Game Release Notes forum section.
This doesn't require you to use another service (assuming you already use a rss reader), it doesn't require a third party to get the facts right, and judging by this line from their faq
> We try to be as fast as possible. You can expect that your daily email notification will include all releases of your followed applications from the previous day.
, the rss feed will be way faster.
It's an interesting service but I just don't see the point, especially for this game where we already have the release notes easily accessible on the forums, via rss, on reddit, and in the wiki.
Personally I use https://feedly.com/. It's useful for organizing all my sources and browsing them all efficiently in a single interface. I follow blogs, youtube channels, subreddits, online magazines, journals etc.
(And no, I don't work for them :P )
RSS stands for "Rich Site Summary".
Having an RSS feed from a website is like subscribing to the 'new' section of a subreddit. It gives you a copy of the newest things a website publishes, such as an article on a news site or a blog.
You can get apps which hold all your RSS feeds for you (called RSS Readers). These work kind of like the front page of Reddit, except for any website you want.
They save you time by allowing you to look at all the things on the web you're interested in on a single page, rather than having to visit lots of websites, and you don't have to check to see if anything new has been posted on those sites. Some readers also allow you to organise websites you follow or search through your feed for specific things.
If you're looking for a good, easy to use reader, I'd suggest Feedly. Looks nice and has a free option.
Source here
Hope this helped :)
Ich Versuche die Hauptmedienseiten zum recherchieren ehrlicherweise zu meiden. Meist reicht mir die frei zugänglichen Artikel,um mich auf dem laufenden zu halten.
Das + bei den Medienseiten ist meist so der "ja ist ganz nett aber nichts weltbewegendes oder lebensnotwendigen"
Falls man außerhalb der Nachrichten Mal gerne etwas anderes lesen möchte kann so ein + Abo hilfreich sein.
Ich nutze sowohl im Web als auch auf dem Smartphone einen Service namens "Feedly" https://feedly.com
In der Grundausstattung kostenlos. Es extrahiert von jedem newspaper die headlines und die kurzen Intros zu den Artikeln. Ähnlich wie ein RSS service. Damit bekommt man auf einem Blick schnell mit was los ist bei den diversen Newsseiten. Zu hot Topics werden dann die Highlights oben eingeblendet mit der höchsten Klickrate. Mit einem Klick auf die Seite landet man auf der entsprechenden Webseite des Newsanbieter.
Für mich hat sich gezeigt - traue niemals nur einer Quelle.
Man merkt (vor allem wenn man neu sucht), dass viele Medienseiten teilweise einseitig Berichten. Das bekommt man jedoch erst im Laufe der Zeit so richtig mit. Ich neige daher dazu Artikeln aus diversen Quellen zu lesen und meine eigene Meinung zu bilden. Oftmals reicht mir da die Zusammenfassung bzw. Die headline, ob ich hier gerade Zeit verschwende oder informiert werde.
So gehe zumindest ich persönlich damit um.
Edit: nochmal auf deine genannten Medien Seiten einzugehen. Bin ebenfalls auf denen unterwegs. 👍
Uso Feedly e normalmente mi basta incollarci dentro l'URL del podcast per ottenerne il feed: molti podcaster usano ancora RSS per diffondere i contenuti, e anche le maggiori piattaforme. Così mi arrivano gli aggiornamenti in Feedly insieme a tuto il resto a cui sono iscritto.
>The pipe dream as I imagine it would be a news/headline aggregation site that lets you pick which vendors/technologies you want to keep abreast of and then shows the major headlines based on your picks
I would love to add such a feature, but sadly as far as I know none of the most popular mobile players offer an officially supported API that could be used for sync.
Hopefully one day, but I doubt they'd be that interested in putting in the work for people to use someone else's front end.
It would be interesting if someone built a service like Feedly for podcasts, that all players could sync with, allowing users to have their podcasts and play histories in one place and then be able to seamlessly use their preferred app on each platform.
RSS isn't dying. Firefox was removing the RSS feature for performance reasons (as far as I know).
Thunderbird is also great for reading RSS. But most of the time I use the free version of feedly.com that is also a pretty decent RSS aggregator. Many website have kinda hidden rss feeds and you can also subscribe via RSS for youtube channels. Kinda cool.
I use an RSS reader, which is linked to the channel's videos pages. As far as I know, they aren't messing with that, yet. And God help them if they ever do. The benefit of an RSS reader is that you get notified whenever there is a new video, you typically get a list of all videos that you have in your feed, with no exceptions. And it knows the ones you've watched so that you won't have to remember.
Right now, I use Feedly. Other RSS readers are available.
Sure, just add the URLs of your subscriptions to an RSS service like Feedly. There's also a way to export all of them and add them at once: https://support.google.com/youtube/answer/6224202?hl=en
Ah, I see. Well it's still true that you can't tweak any of the default search engines in the interface, neither disable nor remove them and not even tweak the keyword assigned to them. I use Google for everything so I didn't even notice that before you mentioned it. But good catch, that's something that Opera definitely could remove some restrictions from.
Though the part about the feeds/news is a bit of a non-issue. You must manually click on the 'Personal News' icon to access it in the browser (that icon can be disabled through the interface) and "Top 50" (Opera's pre-defined sources) is based on your country and is only selected by default if you haven't added any sources yourself. With personal sources the 'Personal News' feature will always default to open 'My sources' and not the 'Top 50' section. These feeds don't exist outside of this page at all, neither in the toolbar nor on the speed dial. The only minor note is that recommended sources show up occasionally further down on the page.
Personally there's absolutely no reason at all to ever use Opera's built-in 'Personal news' feature since it lacks even the most basic feed functionality (mark as read, etc). It's basically just a bunch of aggregated links to articles on a single page, sorted most recent to oldest. I highly recommend Feedly instead.
I've been using Feedly for a long time now and it's been fantastic. Easy to change layouts, integrates with common link saver programs / social media, and has both a free/paid version (I use the free version).
I believe the double application of bonus occurs in BOTH exploited and controlled systems. But get in quick as the fix is coming very soon!
You can also use websites like Feedly that will compile the most popular articles from whichever news sources you want to keep up to date with. It has kept me up to date with current events for awhile now.
Dedicating at least 1 hour every day to reading various publications, blogs etc... will help you train your eye to witness trends before they become mainstream. Set-up a https://feedly.com so you can aggregate all your news in one spot - their site also has recommended publications (much like Flipboard). One publication I love is Fast Company http://www.fastcocreate.com/ These days, I am interested in watching the evolution of Live Streaming (Periscope is gaining a bit of traction) and the future of 3D printing + wearables technology. Lastly, find networking groups and surround yourself with like-minded people who are also passionate about business.
I was a little blunt.
However, an addon/app I have just started using is Feedly. It's brilliant. Imagine a Facebook but for RSS-style feeds from chosen websites and in categories. It's cross compatible with mobiles and various browsers, and is hooked up to one account. It's brilliant!
Here's a screen shot of mine: Imgur
You can search tags, or topics to find new websites if you don't know any specifically.
I recommend feedly:
https://feedly.com/index.html#welcome
it actually syncs on your PC (chrome extension) and phone (app), which is pretty damn convenient when you're reading on more that a device.
Eu só uso fb devido à facilidade de comunicar com as pessoas e para ver os títulos de notícias. Essencialmente são as únicas utilidades 😂
Eu recomendo-te usares feeds RSS. É rápido, prático e escolhes os tópicos que te interessam e de diversas fontes. Hoje em dia quase todos os sites de notícias têm essa funcionalidade e não ficas no escuro. Tal como o fb, podes fazer login com a tua conta e manteres esses feeds em qualquer aparelho.
My current method is Feedly. Almost all serious websites have RSS feed or enough known to be recognized by Feedly. This way, I can gather all the information at the same place with clean interface. That's how I'm keeping up to date. I'm doing this for Cloud/Computer/Network but It would also work for programming language updates.
Ah yes, it's a common confusion: the profile email is is just where you want to receive emails from Feedly. Changing it doesn't change your login, we should probably make it clearer...
You can add/remove logins on the logins page.
There's a known issue around unread count, but this sounds different: it's like the server doesn't receive the requests to mark articles as read... If you don't mind, could you open a support ticket so we can investigate this? And if you have some time, could you try to replicate this issue in a private browser window with extensions turned off? Cheers!
It looks like the Digg RSS page is down. The link is still there, but I'm getting an error page when I try to access https://digg.com/rss/top.rss
. Probably a service outage?
If you need to resubscribe in Feedly, you can use this link.
Best way to keep track of updates of individual sites is using the open standard RSS instead of relying on individual browser extensions. Youtube channels do have feeds but they are hidden. Follow instructions here to get the feeds of the channels you're interested in and follow them using any RSS reader of your choice. Feedly is a web based RSS service, other than that there's QuiteRSS for desktop and various free Android clients on F-Droid, or maybe RSS capable extensions on Chrome.
Fuck Mozilla for completely getting rid of Firefox's RSS support that places the user in control of what sites they want to be notified of updates from while retaining that for website notifications that Chrome introduced, which inverts control to the website by letting them spam you whenever they please. Thanks to their idiocy, nobody even remembers it after Google got rid of Reader in 2013.
Hello Glirey, I wish create a shortcut that able me open "x" urr page directly in Feedly app. So for example in this case I put the "url comand" to open Feedly "feedly:" and then I write Google.con only to show this. The problem is that the Feedly app will open but the page (in this case Google.com) don't load. I understand that exist a special comand that able me can this. I searched and until the moment y descovered that feedly have your own feedly rss converter. So for example to open one article of "9tomac" for feedly is the next the s URL "https://feedly.com/i/entry/BmoAzSEWHFzR01wyxBZAhNEo11Vy8oDR1qKDe+tKVEQ=_1799e59ea9c:10fd347:fa97248d" and in this moment I searching how work this rss converter to use that to my proposal
Win10 - FeedLab
Android - gReader Pro 4.3.1 (a gReader fejlesztése már megszűnt, mégis a legjobb feedly app a mai napig)
Böngészőben - Feedly
Once you're logged into Feedly, click the + icon (which takes you to https://feedly.com/i/discover) Then copy in the youtube channel URL You may wish to add them to a folder specific to YouTube, in case you follow other news sources like I do (Kotaku, Siliconera, etc) This process will go faster if you have your list of subscriptions up from the Manage page (https://www.youtube.com/feed/channels) then just copy the links from that list.
I found links in your comment that were not hyperlinked:
I did the honors for you.
^delete ^| ^information ^| ^<3
Feedly dovrebbe fare al caso tuo. Non so se tutto ciò che chiedi è fattibile con un account gratuito, in ogni caso i prezzi non sono esagerati se riesci a ritagliarlo sulle tue esigenze utilizzandolo come unica fonte di notizie.
Win10 - FeedLab
Android - gReader Pro 4.3.1
Böngészőben - Feedly
a zIndex még 1-2 hétig marad (max) aztán letiltás routeren 🤷♂️
Well, the site has to have a RSS feed in the first place - it should not be assumed. If there isn't a link, try a Google search like "site:thesite.com RSS".
I use the Feedly RSS aggregator, and you can add sites by name only. If the RSS feed is in their database, it will use that, or there are common URL extensions for such feeds that it knows. But like I said first, the site has to have a feed.
There is, use RSS feeds. This is what it looks like. Click this button to get the RSS link. Then you just put that link into a RSS reader, there are multiple out there, I use https://feedly.com/
Then just check that, it only notifies on threadmark updates. If you follow more than just the main thread marks, they will require their own following. For example sidestory and informational in that example I showed also have their own RSS if you want to follow those.
Looks pretty, but lacks functionality. Filtering would require a 3rd party service, which kills their recommendation engine.
They are targeting a slightly different market and have many more "apps" beyond simple RSS feeds.
Not sure how well the basic functionality would scale. When I tested them a few years ago, those apps were a nuisance I struggled to switch off and the interface was cluttered beyond usability. Things might have changed though.
Interface straight from the 90s, but otherwise seems to be a valid option.
Does anyone know of any good open source feed aggregators we can set up on our desktops/servers and export feeds into various readers?
This is why (apart from the more timely hockey trade\rumor updates) Twitter is still worthwhile to me.
I've been using Feedly for all my RSS Feeds. When this happens will Firefox know a feed exists on a website or will it need an extension to detect it? Will it even be able to preview one? Guess we'll see when it hits Nightly. Hmmm..
Instead of a social media wall of things from people you might not care about. You visit your favorite websites/blogs and create a massive collection of "walls" per website or topic that you are interested in.
You can keep track of which posts on which websites you have or have not read yet. You can group related websites into categories or folders and see a wall of everything in that category instead of split out into individual websites.
You can set your RSS Feed reader to download articles for reading offline. Whenever I don't have wifi I have several thousand unread articles from my favourite websites that I can read to pass the time.
I was a neophyte and did it through Feedly in just a few minutes.
I created a login through my Facebook account, so no real setup there. After that, it brought me to a page with a search bar so I could input my "interests." I looked to the left side of the screen and saw the "create new feed" link and hit that.
It asked me to give it a title, so I did. Then it gave me a simple screen that included a green button labeled "add content." I clicked that and this is where I pasted the RSS URL I got as part of my Patreon confirmation. Immediately after I input that, the TESD "bonus episodes" feed appeared as part of my entries on the left side of the screen. I also added the RSS URLs from regular TESD and another podcast.
And just like that, they started to populate. I saw the links to the most recent TESD episodes and I found that when I right-clicked on the titles of the eps, I was able to "save target as" and put the mp3s right on my desktop.
Your mileage may vary, but it seems to have worked for me thus far.
I was a neophyte and did it through Feedly in just a few minutes.
I created a login through my Facebook account, so no real setup there. After that, it brought me to a page with a search bar so I could input my "interests." I looked to the left side of the screen and saw the "create new feed" link and hit that.
It asked me to give it a title, so I did. Then it gave me a simple screen that included a green button labeled "add content." I clicked that and this is where I pasted the RSS URL I got as part of my Patreon confirmation. Immediately after I input that, the TESD "bonus episodes" feed appeared as part of my entries on the left side of the screen. I also added the RSS URLs from regular TESD and another podcast.
And just like that, they started to populate. I saw the links to the most recent TESD episodes and I found that when I right-clicked on the titles of the eps, I was able to "save target as" and put the mp3s right on my desktop.
Your mileage may vary, but it seems to have worked for me thus far.
Check out Feedly.
I found this about a year ago and use it every day to catch up on news of all sorts. It's really easy to use and customizable. You can "follow" news from publications like NYT, WSJ, The Verge, etc. and also follow keywords like 'Elon Musk' or 'r/Apple' and it will add relevant news to your feed including popular Reddit posts or even specific keyword posts from google.
You can also split the "follows" up into categories e.g. a tech category. So if I just wanna read today's news on tech, I can click the sidebar and just open my tech category. It's really awesome to use. It works so that you can also import current subscriptions from publications you're already paying to read from.
There are apps for both iOS and macOS, but frankly, the macOS app is a hot mess. I use the website when I'm reading on my laptop which is much more convenient.
Edit: spelling
I have stopped using RSS since I started browsing Reddit a lot more. I used to use Feedly to store my RSS feeds and the use an app that supported Feedly. I hated the way the Feedly app looked.
Abortei a missão, achei um site muito bom Feedly, você pode juntar fontes de notícias que você escolher no seu feed.
Algumas prints do site:
Hol dir Feedly (gibt es auch als App) und abonniere ein kleines Zeitungsspektrum von links nach rechts und spare die Kohle.
Ich persönlich habe Neues Deutschland, taz, Zeit, FAZ, Junge Freiheit.
Actually.. another suggestion... Mainly for your wife.. If she subscribes to a lot of blog-style content.. she could check out Feedly.
It's a blog/news site aggregator (similar to google reader when it was around)
Motherhoodandmore is available through it..
https://feedly.com/i/subscription/feed/http://www.motherhoodandmore.com/feed
My imgur are also blocked in my work. I don't know how about you guys, but I still am able to read all class previous using my feedly account: https://feedly.com/i/subscription/feed/http://us.battle.net/wow/en/feed/news
I use Feedly. I really like it because articles are displayed in a nice readable way and you can sort the blogs by topics. Besides, the feedly app is even better than the web version, its interface is prettier.
This. It also has an Atom feed, so you can use it with your favourite RSS/Atom reader - I have it in my Feedly feed so I can see any new updates every morning when I check my feeds.
> > > > > Brief - RSS feed reader. While it is the best one I've tried, I'd prefer an online alternative (with the same features, including integrated icon so I won't have to go to the website every now and then) for use with multiple devices.
Try Feedly with App Tab Initializer
O que você quer dizer com "sério"? A (im)parcialidade não define de certa forma a seriedade de uma publicação? E, já que você disse que imparcialidade não é possível, quão imparcial dá pra ser?
Sobre o último item de que você falou, o /u/nixxcode sugeriou o Feedly. Conhece?
> I'm just so tired of having to crosscheck every fucking thing I read
You need to get more comfortable with changing your mind then.
Also with accepting that something is unknown/might be unknowable until more information/evidence arises. Critical thinking skills are great, but many people I see on this sub just have to have a concrete explanation for things before they can feel intellectually sated.
As for your original question -- use an RSS aggregator from multiple sites so that you can at-a-glance get the general gist of something. I use feedly, and subscribe to a bunch of different sources including MSM, NPR, Al Jazeera, and more niche new sources for finance and technology.