But what's actually good in RSS readers these days? Seems like a niche field with alot of options, sell me on your favorite.

| Micolithe |
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| Agender |
| 36 years old |
| Philadelphia, PA |
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| Last Login: 08/30/2007 |
Agender Enby, Trans, Gay, AND the bearer of the gamer's curse. Not a man, not a woman, but instead I am puppy.
I got a fat ass and big ears.
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Yes I did the cooking mama Let's Play way back when. I post alot about Tech (mostly how it sucks) and Cooking and Music and Television Shows and the occasional Let's Play video
💖@FadeToZac
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We all do what we can ♫
So we can do just one more thing ♫
We can all be free ♫
Maybe not in words ♫
Maybe not with a look ♫
But with your mind ♫
But what's actually good in RSS readers these days? Seems like a niche field with alot of options, sell me on your favorite.
I've been using Omnivore and I think it's a good option for people like me who are a little bit afraid of command lines and curly brackets; it's free, web-based, super simple and doesn't require much tech skill to set up. It's good for saving and indexing non-RSS web links too.
If you're a Firefox user, then the Feedbro Extension slots RSS right into your browser. It's painless, effective, and well-maintained. It's what I use these days.
If you're tied to the Apple ecosystem, then NetNewsWire is, honestly, the only worthwhile choice, featuring iCloud-supported sync and a smorgasborg of features. When I was still tied to the Apple ecosystem it's what I used.