I'm not moving to another reader so my primary source of news will disappear overnight which I think is a shock I'm not ready to take. Come June I'll likely go to reader.google.com several times, if not just by mistake or out of habit.
Unless I haven't looked hard enough, I want:
* Reader software that can easily install onto a LNMP stack
* Runs in the browser (Desktop & Mobile)
* Has a UI that's extremely similar to Reader - including the inbox system!
* Is FLOSSy (No license preference)
Why?
* Prevent this from ever happening again (no vendor lock in!). It's also free.
* An app is fine but I have reader set to my homepage - it literally is my news source.
* Unlike others, I prefer the inbox system. Too many feeds? Unsubscribe.
At this point surely the question is "where has Google Reader traffic gone?" Anyone who really cares about using Reader has hopefully moved on somewhere. Surely the new readers are showing up in web server logs by now?
My own weblog is too small to be much use, but Referer data I have suggests it's mostly Feedly. Unfortunately the Feedly scraper doesn't include the number of subscribers in its request headers. And these days the Referer header isn't nearly as useful as it used to be.
The clock is ticking, and I'm getting a little nervous because my primary use of Google Reader is maybe slightly unusual.
What I really need is something that's going to let me manage podcast feeds with a web interface, and sync those feeds to an Android app automatically. Any suggestions? I'm still using Google Listen even though it was abandoned ages ago, just because it gets this particular feature right.
Listen Up[1] (free version[2]) team is working on integrating it with gPodder.net[3] which, unfortunately, seems to be folding under the new load[4]. It's down right now, actually, and I don't remember their webUI but the desktop client[5] is nice so if you want to manage subscriptions from your computer, that's a way to do it. Not currently but in general. This is what I'm going with anyway.
I'm in a similar situation. I used to use Google Listen for podcasts (which was backed by Reader). I never used the online interface, but I've been using Listen a lot.
I tried a bunch of different free and paid apps, but I settled on Pocket Casts, which wasn't free. I'm happy with it - it syncs cross device, it has good config options, it looks gorgeous. I don't think there's a web interface, so it might not be the best for you.
Other questions include how content providers behave. I've subscribed to the Dilbert Daily Strip feed for several years. About a week ago they decided they no longer want readers via RSS: http://feed.dilbert.com/dilbert/daily_strip
I think a factor is Feedburner scraped the URL every 4 hours. Thousands of readers all for 6 hits a day? Easy. With Reader the load was minimal, now that everyone has splintered off the load could become astronomically higher due to inconsiderate configuration* and the lack of a centralised cache.
While Feedburner still exists, I doubt it'll be around for much longer. Please correct me if I'm wrong.
* I acknowledge some used Thunderbird or other clients to access RSS, however the majority used Reader which made the load much lower.
Scraping every 15 minutes = 96 hits/user/day or other 'inconsiderate' options.
Yeah, I'm curious about that too. I'm feeling rather glad I jumped ship to e-mail a couple of years ago and will probably (though I'm not 100% sure yet) let most of my RSS-based stuff fall into disrepair.
I'm using the AOL reader (yeah I really wrote that) at least initially. It's a very simple (one might say blah) interface that takes almost 0 effort to learn.
Most positive thing is that it was dead easy to import my Reader feed selection.
It would most definitely be weird if Google killing Reader gave AOL some relevance again.
I use Digg for feeds and soundcloud/youtube for podcasts. If the podcaster isn't using those mediums, I don't listen to them because there is a lack of a good audio podcasting listening service. Although... I have tried to use digg yet
http://i.imgur.com/L3JPjqw.png Risky post, I know, but I find it telling that it seems like there are still a number of us scrambling to pick someone to move to, or at least dragging our feet to. I just am so used to clicking on the red and blue icon!
[+] [-] ancarda|12 years ago|reply
Unless I haven't looked hard enough, I want:
* Reader software that can easily install onto a LNMP stack
* Runs in the browser (Desktop & Mobile)
* Has a UI that's extremely similar to Reader - including the inbox system!
* Is FLOSSy (No license preference)
Why?
* Prevent this from ever happening again (no vendor lock in!). It's also free.
* An app is fine but I have reader set to my homepage - it literally is my news source.
* Unlike others, I prefer the inbox system. Too many feeds? Unsubscribe.
* See point #1.
Any suggestions?
[+] [-] jancborchardt|12 years ago|reply
* ownCloud is mainly for LAMP but also works on Nginx (which I presume is the N): http://owncloud.org
* it’s a web app, and there are several mobile clients: https://github.com/owncloud/news#mobile-clients
* simple UI. What do you mean by »Inbox system«? (If it’s »unread items«, we have that)
* it’s open source, AGPL v3, code up at https://github.com/owncloud/news
* Plus: We have an API so anyone can code apps for it: https://github.com/owncloud/news/wiki/API-1.2
What do you think?
[+] [-] khass|12 years ago|reply
You can use some css themes to have tiny tiny rss to look like google reader.
I tried fever for a while but stuck with Tiny tiny, for me it works better due to the customization options and lower server footprint.
[+] [-] zeckalpha|12 years ago|reply
[+] [-] ElbertF|12 years ago|reply
https://github.com/ElbertF/Readable.cc
[+] [-] Numberwang|12 years ago|reply
[+] [-] NelsonMinar|12 years ago|reply
My own weblog is too small to be much use, but Referer data I have suggests it's mostly Feedly. Unfortunately the Feedly scraper doesn't include the number of subscribers in its request headers. And these days the Referer header isn't nearly as useful as it used to be.
[+] [-] TillE|12 years ago|reply
What I really need is something that's going to let me manage podcast feeds with a web interface, and sync those feeds to an Android app automatically. Any suggestions? I'm still using Google Listen even though it was abandoned ages ago, just because it gets this particular feature right.
[+] [-] spindritf|12 years ago|reply
[1] https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=org.codepimps....
[2] https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=org.codepimps....
[3] http://codepimpsdotorg.blogspot.com/2013/05/listen-up-gpodde...
[4] http://codepimpsdotorg.blogspot.com/2013/06/listen-up-gpodde...
[5] http://gpodder.org/
[+] [-] jffry|12 years ago|reply
I tried a bunch of different free and paid apps, but I settled on Pocket Casts, which wasn't free. I'm happy with it - it syncs cross device, it has good config options, it looks gorgeous. I don't think there's a web interface, so it might not be the best for you.
[+] [-] rogerbinns|12 years ago|reply
[+] [-] ancarda|12 years ago|reply
While Feedburner still exists, I doubt it'll be around for much longer. Please correct me if I'm wrong.
* I acknowledge some used Thunderbird or other clients to access RSS, however the majority used Reader which made the load much lower. Scraping every 15 minutes = 96 hits/user/day or other 'inconsiderate' options.
[+] [-] petercooper|12 years ago|reply
[+] [-] teach|12 years ago|reply
[+] [-] forgotAgain|12 years ago|reply
Most positive thing is that it was dead easy to import my Reader feed selection.
It would most definitely be weird if Google killing Reader gave AOL some relevance again.
[+] [-] raymondduke|12 years ago|reply
[+] [-] prathibhanu|12 years ago|reply
[+] [-] drivebyacct2|12 years ago|reply
[+] [-] newernpguy|12 years ago|reply