@parigotmanchot J’ai testé linkwarden, #linkding, #readeck, #shiori-go, #archivebox, au final je reste sur du combo #wallabag et #shaarli.
Wallabag est supporté par ma liseuse et tu as plein de petit programme qui exporte le tout sous wallabag et shaarli. Le point négatif est la non prise en charge de pas mal de site, j’utilise #miniflux et j’exporte des articles vers ceux cités mais il n’y a que wallabag que je n’arrive pas à lire en hors ligne
You all, #Miniflux is the most accessible RSS service/reader I could find, to date, and I tried almost all of them. Well, Feedly seemed bloated, Inoreader stinks of investor something something but I can't put my finger on it, the Old reader has way to many social features for my taste, and feedbin isn't as fluid as Miniflux is. I can't recommend this enough! Get it get it get it! Best of all, it connects to other readers and services. It has a self hosting option but I pay for the hosted version https://miniflux.app/hosting.html#RSS#Accessibility
Miniflux 2.1.0 just dropped, including many, many accessibility improvements: there are now landmarks throughout, controls that act as buttons now use the role of button (this still needs work. Semantic HTML, please), skip links, feed entries are now headings, and much, much more! https://miniflux.app/#RSS#accessibility#Miniflux#feeds
Aclaración: No recomiendo Feedly, pero es una forma fácil de llegar, así que cada quien con lo que esté más cómodo.
Otra aclaración: yo uso #Miniflux auto-hospedado, que me parece genial por su simpleza. Si no lo quieres/puedes hospedar, puedes pagar la suscripción que ofrece la web oficial.
#Debian RFPs can be useful contributions too. Simply telling the community that you would like to see something in Debian, though you don't have the bandwidth to do the packaging yourself can be useful. It either serves as a TODO item for your future self, or somebody else will do the packaging meanwhile.
Monthly reminder to use #RSS. I prefer #Miniflux with #Lire for screen reader #a11y reasons, but there are lots of other services and apps out there that can do the same thing. https://www.youneedfeeds.com/ has a bunch of starter packs for various interests if you don't know where to begin. In many cases, you can just add "/rss" or "/feed" to the end of a URL and get an RSS feed for adding to your favorite app.
There's a lot to like about it - speed, simplicity and mobile-friendliness.
There's a download button on feeds where they don't publish the full content, but only give a preview. You can also make downloading content the default in the feed's settings.
@njoseph#Miniflux is great. I use it with a mobile app but also heavily customized the web UI so it works well with my #eBook reader's #eink screen. Works like a charm.