@Daojoan yes, paid for it for 4 years. Gets the job done. I chose it for the evernote share. Now I'm using @omnivore ( for a selections of feeds) and @NetNewsWire for the rest, and the most active ( news, or similar). Helps not having the most feeds on mobile; I'm more intentional with what I read.
@Daojoan When Google News pulled the plug, I switched to Feedly initially. After a couple of years, RSS apps on the Mac and iOS started to implement iCloud syncing, negating the need for an aggregator (who knows what they do with that data 🤷♂️). I switched with NNW (and sometimes Reeder) using iCloud syncing and haven't looked back.
@Daojoan I’m using it for several years now and it really ticks all the boxes for me.
Other than the things you expect from an RSS reader, it also has many extras like annotations, keyword highlighting, global tracking feeds, creating feeds for websites without one, and can be integrated with many other tools if you need that kind of stuff. It also has extra follow options like subreddits, google news, telegram channels etc. It’s a real powerhouse.
@Daojoan Sorry for my answer that is quite not what you asked for.
I’ve never used inoreader, so I can not give a feedback, but I use FreshRSS, I can talk about this one if you want.
Here are a few links for hosting providers (I have my own at home, but many people opened their instances) : https://freshrss.org/cloud-providers.html
@Daojoan I switched from feedly to Inoreader since years back; can't remember why, but I'm happy with Inoreader.
I'm also keen on @Birb which is a simple bot for making RSS feeds available in the Fediverse, though having used it for a bit I have discovered that I want to consume social feeds and RSS in different ways; I want a lower volume, per-feed view with unread counts for RSS so that I don't miss e.g. an episode of a webcomic, whilst the socials are more firehose.
@Daojoan if you're more on the adventurous side, you may try #tt-rss, it's 100% #OSS, and it has a docker version, in case you want to ease installation.
There's a nice smartphone app also.
I have an instance running on my home server for years now, and I simply forget about it and use my cell phone to keep up to date on a daily basis.
You can always host it in the cloud, on a small instance.
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