I find that the space this is growing in is on the Web, as a monthly or yearly service. I go with Inoreader, as they seem to be actively seeking to innovate and come up with new ideas in the space. They also are in the midst of an annual Black Friday deal that is the best deal of the year.
All of the above sounds very boosterish, but that link is not an affiliate one, and I honestly mean my recommendation in response to your question.
after i saw your post i went and checked if reddit supports rss.
turns out it does (duh): http://www.reddit.com/wiki/rss
you can subscribe to user submitted posts by giving your favourite rss reader a link like:
http://www.reddit.com/user/guidosbestfriend/submitted/.rss
ofcourse you will miss any stories that are "continued in the comments" but you can still subscribe to users comments and figure out a way to filter them (perhaps based on their length) to catch the comments that actually are followups to the stories.
hope it thelps.
edit: i have not used any rss reader in years but from a quick search this looks fantastic: https://www.inoreader.com/ you can even create a rule for your subscription based on regular expression so you can potentially use character count (or word count) or comment containing the word "continued" - and only notify you about that comments.
actually thank you for this question as i will be doing exactly that ;) somehow it didn't occur to me before ;)
Con Inoreader puoi arrrivare ai 150, e ti consente cartelle infinite. Certo non hai la libertà di mettere ciò che vuoi ma sempre meglio di Feedly in questo senso.
P.S. come fai a seguire tutti quei feed? Io tutte le volte che ci provo mi viene l'ansia di leggerli tutti lol. Preferisco quacosa che faccia scorrere le notizie aldilà che io legga o meno, tipo Twitter, o magari Start.me per gli Rss
Το indymedia το έχω κι εγώ, απλώς σε διαφορετικό φάκελο, για αυτό δεν μπήκε σε αυτά. Θα δω μήπως το προσθέσω κι εδώ :).
Όσον αφορά τον reader, τσέκαρε και τον Inoreader. Έχει πολύ πιο πλούσια χαρακτηριστικά από το Feedly. Από κανόνες, γρήγορε ενεργές αναζητήσεις, φίλτρα και ετικέτες μέχρι συνδρομή σε ροές Twitter, Facebook και Google Plus.
Έχεις κάτι από γεωπολιτικά να μου προτείνεις;
Have you tried the automated RSS feed creators or even made your own scrapers?
Something like https://www.inoreader.com/blog/2020/04/convert-almost-any-webpage-into-rss-feed-with-inoreaders-web-feeds.html for example, this is the service I jumped into after testing out everything that was available at the time of Google Reader phasing out.
... you could also just use Inoreader...
In Inoreader + subscribe icon enter e.g.
https://www.youtube.com/user/SesameStreet/videos
Inoreader will identify the rss address all by its little self & you can follow it(subscribe)
You can click on the subscribed feed & choose Feed properties to see ...
https://www.youtube.com/feeds/videos.xml?channel_id=UCoookXUzPciGrEZEXmh4Jjg
You now have the rss to subscribe to, if you don't want to use Inoreader.
If you have a lot feeds you want to subscribe to you can use the following bookmarklet:
javascript:function p(a,w,h){var b=window.screenLeft!=undefined?window.screenLeft:screen.left;var c=window.screenTop!=undefined?window.screenTop:screen.top;width=window.innerWidth?window.innerWidth:document.documentElement.clientWidth?document.documentElement.clientWidth:screen.width;height=window.innerHeight?window.innerHeight:document.documentElement.clientHeight?document.documentElement.clientHeight:screen.height;var d=((width/2)-(w/2))+b;var e=((height/2)-(h/2))+c;var f=window.open(a,new Date().getTime(),'width='+w+', height='+h+', top='+e+', left='+d+'location=yes,resizable=yes,status=no,scrollbars=no,personalbar=no,toolbar=no,menubar=no');if(window.focus){f.focus()}}p('https://www.inoreader.com/bookmarklet/subscribe/'+encodeURIComponent(location.href),640,400);
Inoreader
PS The icons are visible to everyone - the "sort by magic΅ unfortunately requires the pro plan.
No problem, it's not super common tech nowadays. RSS stands for Rich Site Summary. An RSS feed is a list of a site's content in a format that can easily be read by a program. Your browser can't read a standard webpage and tell you if there is new content, but it can read a new entry in the RSS feed without you having to check the site yourself.
So, you take a link to a website's RSS feed and plug it into a program called an RSS reader. You plug RSS feeds for multiple websites into it. The reader will give you a list of the latest updates from those websites. When a website posts a new update, it will automatically appear at the top of the list in your reader. The most popular use of an RSS reader is for news sites. You plug your preferred news sites into your reader, and when those sites publish a new article, it'll appear in your reader automatically. However, there are other uses for RSS.
RSS was pretty popular, but in the last decade, popularity has gone down a bit. Tools like Google News that aggregate news based on your interests, and an increase in people who just get their news from social media have impacted RSS popularity.
I personally used RSS years ago. Nowadays, I only use it for work. I work in crypto, so it's important for me to be on top of crypto news. My work computer is a Mac. My RSS reader of choice is An Otter RSS, but it's Mac only. Inoreader is the most-suggested one I see for Windows. This thread has a lot of suggestions for web-based readers, but the thread is 8 years old, so some of those might not work anymore. I know that NewsBlur still works.
If you do decide to start using an RSS reader, I recommend that you do a bit of research and pick up a reader that you really like.
RSS feeds are a structured list in a standard format, that a site publishes of their new content. Because the format is consistent they can be checked periodically and automatically by an aggregator, without it needing to know how to parse the individual site.
If a site chooses not to publish a feed then I guess that's their own business to decide how they want to enable people to follow their content. Seems short-sighted though, for a news outlet.
There's a feed of at least some subset of the AP's top stories here: https://feedx.net/rss/ap.xml - or there are services like Feed43 (or the RSS reader Inoreader has its own version of that service built in) that can be set up to monitor a page and produce an RSS feed for you based on it.
But I'm not sure how complete (or how timely) any of those options would be. If you want to be notified for everything and to be sure of it being immediate you may need to setup something more special-purpose to repeatedly scrape the page.
Suosittelen RSS-syötelukijapalvelua Inoreader. Tämänkin postauksen luin ensin syötteestä ja tulin katsomaan mitä on kommentoitu. Ilmaiseksi saa käyttää max 150 lähdettä, mutta jo kannatuksen vuoksi 50€ per vuosi Pro-versiosta ei ole paha, eihän? Myös Twitterit/FB ja sähköpostilistat saa tilattua ja keskitettyä sinne.
ja bloginsa
I follow professionals, companies, students, inspiration pages, etc on Instagram. I try to curate an ID feed here on inoreader: https://www.inoreader.com/stream/user/1006556632/tag/ID
Websites besides Core77 I use Yanko Design, Designboom, Co.Design, and Behance.
You say you want to streamline the bookmarking process. I can't recommend enough this program called InnoReader. It's completely changed how I approach this topic. It's effectively an RSS feeder, so you can add all your favorite journals there. You can view all your feeds together or individually by journal. It will "gray out" the ones you've already read and in general is a beautiful app. It also has a bookmarking feature where you can read articles later either on the app or on their website when you get to work. It honestly feels a lot like Reddit. I just scroll through the new articles of the day before going to bed. Takes like 30 seconds to identify potentially interesting articles based on title/abstract and save them for later.
Looking at that feed there's a lot of extraneous code there.
You should only have this in <description>:
But I see a lot more in there: http://pastebin.com/3GRr6f2V
In Inoreader the feed looks just fine though, image and all: https://www.inoreader.com/feed/http%3A%2F%2Ffeed43.com%2F2463380374704052.xml
And whatever Inoreader does to clean up the feed, exporting it and putting it in Feedly makes it work. So that rules out an embedding issue.
It's most likely the extra code, plus Feedly being less able to clean it up.
I use Inoreader ( https://www.inoreader.com ) and it has built in integration with Facebook, Google, Twitter, and other services of that ilk. I don't integrate with all that crap, but it's the best RSS app since Good Reader went away. :(
I'm probably missing out on a lot, but I don't venture far beyond the podcasts here: http://www.podcastawards.com/ and a few others that are based on niche interests.
I keep a list of about 10 or 15 active subscriptions in https://www.inoreader.com/
I've just started to use Inoreader to manage my Channels and I have to say I'm very impressed by it, provides me with all the functionality that I wanted to have in Youtube: loads of Collections (called Folders in Ino), tags for watched videos, filters for Folders and subscriptions and a decent amount of social (using either the profile or the bundles).
The only downside is that YT doesn't provide an OPML of my channels, so I do have to maintain the channels in two places. Also, it looks like the YT RSS-feed isn't updated in real-time so the Subscriptions-overview in Ino lags a bit.
Link to my All Youtube-bundle: https://www.inoreader.com/bundle/0014cd6369a0
So far I haven't found a RSS extension good enough to be my main reader, so I just use Google's extension for basic feed detection and Inoreader. And yes, it does support searching.
I wanted to add it to my newsfeed reader, then I noticed it does not have any RSS or Atom feed, so my reader can't read it.
If you don't update the comic anymore, you can even manually write a static XML file and put it somewhere.
An account is required. The hard thing about this pop up is that it will appear at random. There could be days I do not see this thing, and then it is just randomly there after having it open for a few hours.
I used to do the same with Inoreader. It was nice to have my bookmarks and my RSS feeds in one place, but I too eventually moved on to something else (I use Newsblur, but it doesn't have bookmark feature)
Have you seen Inoreader lately? It is even more feature-rich than before, although it's reflected on the prices too. Looks like they're really trying to take on Feedly as the most popular feed reader.
Hey /u/GoofyGodsComics, did you stop updating your Webtoon entirely? Only once this hit /r/comics did I notice that the Webtoon page is missing the last dozen or so comics that were uploaded to your Instagram and Reddit.
A standard website would be fine too, tbh. I'm just looking for a place where I can get a solid RSS feed of the comic, since I prefer using something like Inoreader to follow comics over Instagram.
Either
copy the Substack URL into the Inoreader search bar, it will likely generate a feed URL
take the Substack URL and add 'feed' at the end. E.g. https://doomberg.substack.com/feed ; then subscribe to that
make a Newsletter feed - paid only I think but works great for me
I am not sure but with the PRO version you can save them in Google Drive. For the pricing:
https://www.inoreader.com/pricing
You can create a profile for free and you will see.... I personally use the PRO version and they keep all the feeds even the ones which are 5 years old or i can save them.
I use Feedly, but I have a subscription. This site looks like it would do what you want: https://rss.app/ but you have to have an account, and it's not clear to me whether or not it's completely free. Here is some info from Inoreader on the topic: https://www.inoreader.com/knowledge-base/how-to-create-rss-feeds-from-twitter
The above quote is from Inoreader's original blog post of October 2014, that I stilll have in my feed.
When you now go to that post the content has radically changed
Yes, nowadays Bundles are more of a personal thing.
Over the years I have built up my own bundles/folders and don't need prefilled bundles - but I think they still would be useful for new users.
I am also looking into starting one - while I was doing some brief reading this morning, I happened upon this article, which is obviously trying to sell their product, but provides links to some tools that appear useful
The points /u/chickenandliver makes are spot on and something I didn't highlight myself clearly enough. Inoreader is a perfectly functional RSS reader. However, it does so much more and that is what you pay for. Explore the features before you jump in with a paid plan.
Also, Feedly does look more beautiful than Inoreader - with that said, features are a higher priority - the sheer range of customisation in Inoreader is massive.
To answer your questions, I went with the Pro plan as I wanted rules, de-duplication, filters etc. The apps on iPhone and iPad are excellent (can't comment on other platforms) and sync seamlessly with their website portal.
Je tiens un podcast sur le sujet de l'immobilier avec quelques conseils qui pourraient t'aider. MP si jamais tu veux le nom.
Apres je dirais que leparticulier est une bonne lecture.
J'ai aussi un flux rss perso sur l'immobilier que je peux te donner, il va de fiscal, à normes en passant par les différents programmes.
https://www.inoreader.com/stream/user/1004738118/tag/immobilier2/view/json
Il y a quelques faux positifs mais globalement tu peux te tenir à jour et apprendre pas mal.
I also use an RSS feed collator (. https://www.inoreader.com/blog/). I've got feeds for all top tier journals and then some other more specific niche ones. Then I have feeds for keywords and autthors like Pombae above.
Its set to my homepage so I scan it each morning. The Inoreader can mark highly viewed articles (though not sure what the criteria or pool of readers it uses) so I can check out the latest HOT paper about PHOTONIC devices or whatever.
I've also got a paper subscription to Nature because I find I am more likely to read things outside of my field / news / commentary if it is physically in front of me.
It takes a little while to get used to because it's not the same exact interface, but it's close enough that I've been using it for like 7 years. You can still toggle through blog posts using your keyboard instead of just scrolling.
I was heartbroken when googlereader went away, and now I don't know what I'd do without inoreader.
Seconding RSS feeds - setting up your own RSS reader (Tiny Tiny RSS or Fresh RSS, for example) would be best. You can curate your own selection of news sources!
Otherwise, if you really can't host your own, I think Inoreader has a somewhat decent Privacy Policy, though I'm happy to be corrected on this if that isn't the case.
Inoreader has a sort by magic feature, which sorts based on popularity AND your personal reading habits, but it's available to Pro only.
If you want today's article only, you can set it to show articles older than today's date.
Google News and services based on it are almost not train on user interests. I used it for about a month and was still offered irrelevant news, even though I chose my interests and rated the content.
Now I just switched to RSS subscriptions in Inoreader.
Google News and services based on it are almost not train based on user interests. I used it for about a month and was still offered irrelevant news, even though I chose my interests and rated the content.
Now I just switched to RSS subscriptions in Inoreader.
you can have a look on;
you can convert Almost Any Webpage Into RSS Feed with the pro version; maybe it can help.
but it is not at 100% perfect.
one thing I do when looking for things in CL that might help you is to use https://www.searchtempest.com/ to run searches at a set distance from where you are. It's not real user friendly but one you figure it out it's real handy. You can also use it to setup an RSS feed that will deliver the search results to an RSS aggregator like https://www.inoreader.com/ for automated searching.
I've been using IFTTT to get notifications for new RSS feed items, does anyone know a free alternative that's not capped at refreshing every hour or two hours?
Using AND in regex can be quite complex. A regex expression is by definition an AND expression.
So if you type in "Apple Airpods Pro" that is exactly what you'll find in the results(as opposed to Apple|Airpods|Pro where any of the 3 words by themselves or in combo will show up in the results)
The problem with AND in regex when searching for "Apple Airpods Pro" is that you'll only get a result if in that exact same order. So you wouldn't get a result for "Airpods Pro by Apple" unless you form a pretty complex regex query ...
(?=.*word1)(?=.*word2)(?=.*word3)
... as explained here Achieving logical “and” with Look-aheads
You're probably better of using a set of "contain Rules" in Inoreader or Chrome's Feedbro extension.
There you can set up various "contains" conditions for each search term.
Next for those "contain" conditions you can choose AND/OR in Inoreader or ALL CONDITIONS/ANY CONDITION in Feedbro to get the AND for all of your search terms in whatever order they appear.
This way you'll get results for both "Apple Airpods Pro" as well as "Airpods Pro by Apple" if that is what you want.
Here is an article from Inoreader which will help you to understand:
Depending what I want to do, I set up my search looking for specific articles from my feeds or global search.
Inoreader has this feature. It integrates with your YouTube account so that subscribing/unsubscribing from a channel in YouTube will automatically add/remove its RSS feed from your Inoreader subscriptions list. More: https://www.inoreader.com/blog/2020/04/keep-your-youtube-subscriptions-in-sync-with-inoreader.html
I only do it as a hobby too. I don't know if it was the number of feeds, but I probably have a few hundred (mostly dead blogs). Definitely less than 55 I read daily.
Regardless, inoreader is free.
They do have a comparison page if you wanted to look into it more:
Since the idiots at Google killed their Google Reader, i love and use Inoreader
it cost as a supporter 15$ a year. but it's worth every cent and it works great on DEX via Browser (Edge)
Sharing a couple resources I've built:
Coronavirus (COVID-19) Authoritative Information Sources - This is a list of authoritative links that I'm keeping up to date. A bit of an Arkansas focus but might be helpful to others.
Coronavirus RSS Feeds - A bundle of RSS feeds to keep up to date.
I use RSS feeds to save time and maximize my ablity to adsorb everything that I think people will consider interesting or entertaining. Here you should check this out https://www.inoreader.com/ It aggregates so much content at once and saves alot of time online.
Thank you u/plzno1 your and I owe you an apology thought that was just rendered and I stand corrected your work is astonishing and now that I know r/simulated exists I will be anticipating your next simulation!
Here is my LARGE collection of RV content. It's mostly YouTube but some blogs, Facebook and Instagram feeds in there as well.
https://www.inoreader.com/bundle/0014cd63f1f6
Click the '125 Feeds' down to see the list of sites. I'm always adding to it as I find new ones.
You might like CamperVan Kevin.
I hope and pray that your desire for God and his great treasures will grow and overcome all your earthly desires. Ultimately, if we don't allow God to replace our sinful desires with a love for him we will fail to fight the sin, as our flesh is weak.
On a practical note, if you feel yourself being tempted, stop what you're doing and focus on doing something that will strengthen your relationship with God. If you are on your computer and tempted try to leave your computer and pray or read in the Bible.
Also don't get discouraged, sin will lose, but we are stuck on earth struggling with it until Christ's second coming. And no matter how much you fail God still loves you and has grace.
I am really curious to see what language you used to scrape the threads! This is really awesome!
You should think about something to add, a unique feature, that makes it PRODUCTIVE (i.e. scraping news websites, like this) so you can make a paid version of it!
Thanks everyone for listing your favorites. I had a nice long list already but several of these were new to me as well.
I've put together a bundle of 86 RV related sites now. Most are Youtube but some are old school blogs or even Facebook and Twitter feeds.
Warning, this is a firehose of content:
https://www.inoreader.com/bundle/0014cd63f1f6
Click on Feeds to see the actual URLs. Or, if like me you consume content like they're donuts, I do recommend using Inoreader too. The nice thing is as I add other new sites to the list you'll get the updates too. If it's too much you can drop the ones you don't like or filter out too.
Thanks you.
I can't think of any one tutorial. Honestly most of the post-processing videos I watch are from photographers like Thomas Heaton, who does mostly landscapes. Over time, I've been slowly improving my workflow based on articles I've read about how to adjust for contrast, clarity, when to do sharpening, etc.
I didn't do to much to this photo other than the above, and a light color and exposure treatment in Aurora HDR. I will often try different looks in Aurora and then dial the main slider back and LUTs back to like 10-20%. Those looks can be a little over the top. Sometimes I will make local adjustments in Lightroom to adjust the shadows and highlights of specific areas.
My advice would be to use something like Inoreader to aggregate a bunch of photo blogs and read through various articles. Other than that spend some time cruising through YouTube videos and just google specific techniques that you are interested in learning. Happy to share some specific sites I subscribe to....
personally, I use inroreader. Since I also use it for all my YouTube channel subscriptions (because the subscriptions page on YouTube sucks), I actually paid for pro instead of just using the free one. That way I can keep a number of active searches allow me to track topics and keywords across all of my subscriptions very easily without having to search for them every time and I don't have to worry about a subscription limit. They have apps for both Apple and Android in addition to the website.
When Google Reader died out, I tried a number of different Alternatives including the old reader before finding this one. It's the only one that I was satisfied with. The only thing it doesn't have is a standalone desktop application.
Io uso un RSS reader (https://www.inoreader.com/) e ho buttato dentro un po' di tutto.
Puoi aggiungere tutti i siti che vuoi (sempre che abbiano un feed RSS, ma pressoché ogni sito di notizie ne ha uno) e ti mostra tutti gli articoli che pubblicano in ordine cronologico. Puoi avere diverse categorie (io, per esempio, ho una categoria per tutte le news che riguardano l'italia, quelle che riguardano l'estero, una categoria per siti sportivi, una per i giornali della mia zona etc).
Molto più comodo avere un sito fra i preferiti piuttosto che una manciata di giornali singoli, inoltre ha una discreta serie di funzioni extra che non sono affatto male :)
I use Inoreader as an RSS aggregator. In general, if you want to be notified when one of several streams of content updates, RSS feeds are the most straightforward solution that isn't tied to a platform like Facebook/Twitter/whatever. They're emitted by Wordpress blogs, most webcomics, reddit feeds and even Youtube if you search a little (not Archive of our Own, unfortunately).
Honestly, I'd say any feed aggregator is as good as any other. Inoreader has a good UI, decent features in the free version, no major drawback and mostly does everything you'd expect it to do.
inoreader.com for all my news feeds (better than Feedly, imo).
On the side note, you can generate a RSS feed of practically any place on Reddit by just adding .rss at the end. For instance, if you want follow the top threads of the hour on /r/askreddit, you add: https://www.reddit.com/r/askreddit/top/.rss
inoreader.com for all my feeds (better than Feedly, imo). On the side note, you can generate a RSS feed of practically any place on Reddit by just adding .rss at the end.
https://it.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/RSS
Serve per aggregare le news da varie fonti in un formato gestibile.
Prova https://www.inoreader.com/ per farti un'idea. Esiste anche l'app.
yep. i settled for blocking the shading overlay (www.inoreader.com##[id$="_modal_overlay"]) but not the popup. keyboard shortcuts are WAY too useful for me.
So, am I the only one who stopped relying on YouTube
I use https://www.inoreader.com/ and subscribe to rss feeds
You can even export your subscriptions
Yea, I have about 100 subs and there are quite a few videos that YouTube doesn't want me to see every day, even though the bell is clicked and everything. I went from watched it all or it isn't interesting to I don't have enough time to watch all this.
https://www.youtube.com/subscription_manager Bottom of the page is download.
I use https://www.inoreader.com/ for an online RSS reader. When I first did it there is a problem with it telling what is new, so everything will be out of order. It will do the ordering properly for all new videos, so it is just a day 1 problem really.
Apps are old-school or if you need a feature. First, there was Google Reader, now we have Inoreader so just follow this, optionally register. Imho, they're better than the competitor Feedly.
first you need an rss reader Old Reader or InoReader are free and offer a lot of options.
then you need the rss address for a specific sub ( https://www.reddit.com/r/booksuggestions/.rss) usually you just add .rss at the end of the url.
then you subscribe. and the rss reader will check on the sub every once in a while, usually once an hour, and scrape the posts. after a week you go in and read the posts you are interested in at your own pace.
i do this with a lot of small subs, and twitter accounts, and instagram pages, and even some tumblrs. this way i can consume updates at my own pace and don't have to keep track of when something i am interested in is updated. :)
Personally, i don't like personalized news apps. Just use a feed reader (i recommend Inoreader) and subscribe to your favourite game site RSS feeds.
Here, i created a bundle for you :)
C'est pas Instagram (combien pèse un hipster ?), c'est mes RSS soigneusement sélectionnés que je regarde en me demandant quand est-ce que je vais gagner au loto, mais libre à toi de péruser mes sources.
At first I agreed with you but them killing it made me check out alternatives and I realized that Google Reader was extremely barebones. To the point of being a bad service by comparison to others like it. I've switched to Inoreader and could not be happier. I'm actually glad it's gone because I wouldn't have know better otherwise.
After Google killed their own RSS Reader i switched to The Old Reader, but Commafeed ^Open ^Source, ^but ^Java ^=[ , Inoreader and Feedly are also good alternatives.