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What Do You Use to Read / Consume Blogs, News Sites, and Other RSS Feeds?

When I first started blogging and reading others' blogs, I tried out two stand-alone desktop applications for keeping up to date with my favorite bloggers and other news sites:

While both RssBandit and FeedDemon have slick UIs and are easy to use, I haven't used either for several years. My main gripe was not with the programs, per se, but the model itself: I didn't like having a separate program for reading blog entries. For starters, it wedded my blog subscriptions to a single computer. Second, it meant yet another program I'd have to launch at startup and yet another icon cluttering up my task tray. Back in October 2005 I wrote a blog entry lamenting stand-along blog readers: The Future of Third-Party Offline Aggregators? Are RssBandit and its Kin Dead Weight?

There are a number of popular offline aggregators available.  By 'offline' I mean that these aggregators can be used while not connected to the Internet. ... The future of aggregators, in my opinion, are those that are either online ... or are part of the experience of existing 'everyman' applications (i.e., email or web browsing) and, preferrably, are preinstalled with the software.  The online aggregators seem to make a lot more sense, having a number of advantages of their offline kin:

  • Not bound to a particular computer -  I can be at home, at the office, or on vacation - my subscriptions travel with me.
  • Can utilize the 'social network' - services like Findory make it easy for me to get recommended news and blog items based on my clickthroughs.  Services like del.icio.us allow me to share my online habits/sites/subscriptions with others with like interests.  I can see what the most popular feeds are, or explore the subscriptions of those whose interests match mine.
  • Easier to 'install' and 'uninstall' - want to install My Yahoo! on your computer?  Fire up the ol' browser and enter http://my.yahoo.com - couldn't be easier.  And uninstalling's as easy as not visiting the site again.
  • No resource consumption - doesn't matter if I subscribe to one feed or a hundred - the disk space and bandwidth consumed on my computer stay constant when using an online service.

Another advantage of online blog readers (or any online application, for that matter) is uniquitous upgrades. When Microsoft releases a new version of Office, it is applied only to those peoples' computers who buy the upgrade and install it. When Microsoft releases a new version of Hotmail, however, the update is applied to all users instantaneously. This leads to more rapid application updates, features, and bug fixes.

Since my blog post in 2005, we have seen better integration of RSS feed support in the 'everyman' applications. Both IE and Firefox have RSS subscription capabilities (albeit rather primitive support), as does Outlook 2007. And virtually every online portal website has the ability for users to subscribe to RSS feeds. Third-party offline blog readers are always going to be at the far end of the long tail, especially with the commodity-like status of RSS aggregators these days. I don't think third-party offline readers will every necessarily die off, but they will be used only by a select and small crowd of experienced computer enthusiasts who prefer them over more mainstream or online options for some very specific reasons. And, for most people, those benefits, whatever they may be, are not strong enough to outweight the cost of downloading the application, installing it, setting it up, and learning how to use it.

I'm curious - what do you use to consume blogs and other RSS feeds? Do you use a stand-alone program, or something that's integrated with Outlook? Do you use an online service?

These days, I use Google Reader to subscribe to and keep up to date with the myriad of blogs, news sites, sport sites, and online comics I follow. Google Reader gives me one spot - accessible anywhere in the world - where I can catch up on and manage my RSS subscriptions. Google Reader also has the early stages of social networking baked in. You can share particular blog items and see your friends' shared items. And Google Reader can offer recommendations on feeds you may like based on what feeds people with similar interests have subscribed to.

posted on Monday, June 09, 2008 12:39 PM

Feedback

# re: What Do You Use to Read / Consume Blogs, News Sites, and Other RSS Feeds? 6/9/2008 1:18 PM mgroves

I've found that online readers just don't cut it for a large amount of feeds. I subscribe to 100+ RSS feeds, and I use GreatNews to cruise through them.

# FeedDemon works fine on multiple machines 6/9/2008 1:37 PM Bruce

I use FeedDemon, and it syncs up just fine between multiple machines via NewsGator. Its all free. Perhaps its been a while since you tried it?

# Newsgator for always available feeds 6/9/2008 1:44 PM Stefano

I use Newsgator.
I can read blog at home, at work and with the mobile phone.

# re: What Do You Use to Read / Consume Blogs, News Sites, and Other RSS Feeds? 6/9/2008 2:11 PM Steven J. Ackerman

I use NewsGator. It syncs between home and office so I don't have to read the same entries more than once.

# re: What Do You Use to Read / Consume Blogs, News Sites, and Other RSS Feeds? 6/9/2008 2:25 PM Norman

I am also a big fan of Google Reader. Aside from the benefits you have outlined it integrates nicely with iGoogle so you can view email, weather and other things in the same view.

# re: What Do You Use to Read / Consume Blogs, News Sites, and Other RSS Feeds? 6/9/2008 4:13 PM cas

I use Google Reader since I can access my feeds across multiple feeds. I also have a few loaded on my work computer's Outlook 2007. Google Reader seems to work about 95% of the time. I have run across a few feeds that don't load in it, but work in other readers... I'm not up for installing more and more software on my machine, that's for sure!

# re: What Do You Use to Read / Consume Blogs, News Sites, and Other RSS Feeds? 6/9/2008 5:04 PM Tim Toenies

Google Reader. Desktop & Mobile versions

# re: What Do You Use to Read / Consume Blogs, News Sites, and Other RSS Feeds? 6/10/2008 5:14 AM Gabe

Netvibes, it's money. Web based is definitely better for me because I can get at it anywhere, and it's always up to date with posts I have and have not read.

# re: What Do You Use to Read / Consume Blogs, News Sites, and Other RSS Feeds? 6/10/2008 7:03 AM yuriy

With Google Reader which is much slower than any offline reader and becoming slower and slower, I switched back to NewsGator FeedDemon. It is web application as it syncs multiple computers and online storage. Local database is only cache and I don't need to think about backup.

I can now go through my subscriptions much faster in those folders where I don't read every item.

# re: What Do You Use to Read / Consume Blogs, News Sites, and Other RSS Feeds? 6/10/2008 9:23 AM Slavo

I always hate software with useless features and much more than the average person needs. I've only used Google Reader from the web RSS aggregator solutions, but RSSBandit is too much clatter for me. Google Reader is perfect for my needs - I star items I want to read later, share them with friends and that's it.

# re: What Do You Use to Read / Consume Blogs, News Sites, and Other RSS Feeds? 6/10/2008 10:13 PM Zubair.NET!

I used MyYahoo for 3 years before realizing that it has given up with my growing number of subscriptions then very recently a friend suggested Google Reader. It's plain simple, no fancy UI, no complex setup reader. I can finally leave it running all day to get news feeds unlike MyYahoo where I had to refresh everytime I feel like reading something new.

# re: What Do You Use to Read / Consume Blogs, News Sites, and Other RSS Feeds? 6/11/2008 12:31 AM rsseater

Netvibes ROCKS

# re: What Do You Use to Read / Consume Blogs, News Sites, and Other RSS Feeds? 6/14/2008 9:38 PM Susan

Hi Scott, just found your TW blog. I also use Google Reader for all my RSS subscriptions. I like the shared feature since you can share articles without posting them on other sites like Digg or StumbleUpon. Just subscribed to your feed.

# re: What Do You Use to Read / Consume Blogs, News Sites, and Other RSS Feeds? 6/25/2008 11:45 PM Vikram

I prefer to use IGoogle. It not only lets me see blo0g but also have any other applictaion Like Mini gmail, mini gtalk etc in the same place....

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