'RSS Has Already Won' (brianschrader.com) 161
Brian Schrader, an independent software developer, writes: It's been a little over 5 years since Google Reader shut down and the world of RSS readers was tossed into the junk drawer of collective memory. But, looking back on it today, I'd actually argue that RSS and Feeds as a whole never really disappeared, only the Feed Readers did. In building Pine, and as a long time Feed Reader user, I've been pleasantly surprised over these last 5 years to see that most sites still have RSS feeds. Sure, Facebook and Twitter don't support them, but YouTube, Reddit, Squarespace, Wordpress and so many more do by default. Feeds of all kinds still exist, nearly forgotten, in the markup of most websites, and this means that Feed Readers can, and will, make a comeback someday. The foundations are already laid; the hard work is done. RSS Feeds became a standard, and were built into the tools we use to make the web today. It's almost as if we laid the tracks and built the trains for a trans-continental railroad, but we've just forgotten how to sell tickets.
Still lots of Readers (Score:5, Informative)
I found this post via a RSS Feed reader.
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Thankfully Iâ(TM)ve been using it long enough to be grandfathered into most of the now paid-only features!
Why would an RSS reader have paid-only features? Ohh, I see. It's some kind of web application.
What the hell happened with normal RSS clients?
Re:Still lots of Readers (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Still lots of Readers (Score:5, Informative)
Same here. I think the feedly Android app is a bit cumbersome (what's up with page at a time scrolling?), but it does the job. I track Slashdot, Ars, various forums, and world news sites using Feedly and RSS. Love it.
A while back I asked the forum administrators on a forum I frequent if they could enable the RSS feed, which they did. I view that feed every day. Beats the heck out of using the web interface and trying to track activity on several sub forums.
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I use inoreader, the page for the desktop is very useful and the app (at least for android) is great, a lot of features including an internal small web browser to load feeds quickly with just an up or down pull gesture.
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Re: Still lots of Readers (Score:1)
Read via ttrss app on Android pulling from my ttrss install on heroku.
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Firefox and it's more usable cousin, PaleMoon, both support RSS as live bookmarks. I use that for all my news. BBC World [bbc.co.uk], CBC World [rss.cbc.ca], CBC Canadian [rss.cbc.ca], CNN Latest [cnn.com], and CNN World [cnn.com]. You don't need a dedicated RSS reader to enjoy RSS. It also lets me laugh at people who (still today) get caught by fake stories on social media sites. People who get their news through social media deserve what they get, I think.
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+1
I follow Slashdot and a bunch of other feeds through Firefox and its "Live Bookmarks". I also use RSS feeds in various other ways at home and for work.
I don't think RSS is going away any time soon, but I'm not sure that standalone readers will ever become more popular. Instead, I think RSS will live on through features included in other applications, like Firefox, and integrations with other communication and productivity products, such as Slack.
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I added Slashdot's RSS feed to Thunderbird because of your post.
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Flooding news of Google Reader shutdown made me investigate RSS feeds and started using selfoss. Local readers were not good for keeping "read" satus across multiple devices.
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As did I, and have for a very, very long time - before iGoogle was closed even.
The /. URLs I respond to start with http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/ [slashdot.org], since, after all, I'm using an RSS aggregator, and I get 30-40 sites data daily this way.
RSS not only won, it survived, and it avoids a lot of unpleasantness from many other reader methods, since it's really all mine - I choose, I configure, I delete.
Google News for instance is so up the WaPo butt I find it hard to read most of their news posts, since I run AdBlocke
sns (Score:1)
Isnt twitter and facebook 50% rss reader? Everything you "want" to read is neatly organized
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Kind of I guess, the main difference is that they don't want users to have to much control over how they read it.
What if they gave an RSS feed and nobody came? (Score:1)
I'm betting on a gopher comeback.
Intertubes... just a fad (Score:2)
Gopher. Pah. Been keeping my 110-baud acoustic coupler on the shelf waiting for telephones and BBSs to make their inevitable march back to the front lines. My ASR-33 is ready to print, and my Baudot teletype is standing in ready backup with an ASCII-to-Baudot converted attached.
Real soon now!
What A Friend We Have In ANSI (Score:2)
From that day long ago when you first heard someone describe their website as an >>>EXPERIENCE<<< ... you know your simple literary text-based past is past. Now it's all about EYEBALLS on the PAGE, and the full extent of what tracking is possible with cookies and cookiecruft in gooblegook URLs that may be embedded levels deep. The HTTP Last-Modified: header is dead, even the ignoble ETAG is fakery-trackery in many cases. Your page has content hidden within it, often built on the fly by
Always has to be phrased like a competition, eh? (Score:5, Interesting)
Was it ever a competition? What was was there to "win"? Regardless, I've never stopped relying on them. I have several readers on my Android phone, and use Thunderbird on desktops to collect feeds for review alongside e-mail, which seems perfectly natural to me.
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Was it ever a competition? What was was there to "win"?
Ever hear anyone talk about ATOM feeds anymore?
Yaz
RSS Smart bookmarks in Firefox rock (Score:1)
I read all my news off them. Cuts out all the cruft.
Read this article via RSS & Feedly... (Score:2)
Its not dead.... perhaps not well publicized, but not dead...
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Yep, read this on Feedly too.
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So? (Score:1)
<marquee> is still supported by all major browsers, but I don't see it making a come back any time soon.
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Until you reminded everyone it existed. Quick, to marquee up the internet.
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Ditto for blink
Fascists.
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My crotch has an RSS feed. Every time I bust a nut, it's published to the feed.
amazingly your feed always updates 27 seconds after pornhub.com/gayanalsex/ uploads a new video. coincidence? i think not.
It's a foundation, not a competition. (Score:5, Insightful)
For me at least, if a website doesn't have an RSS feed, I'm not likely to frequent it. My RSS reader is how I interact with a large amount of the web. I honestly can't fathom how people can use the internet without one. It's so mentally taxing and you miss so much stuff.
Re: It's a foundation, not a competition. (Score:4, Informative)
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At this amount of content sources, do you actually watch them or just skim through the headlines?
Skim through the headlines until I see something that I'm interested in.
That's the #1 use of RSS in my experience. My news feeds are nicely varied, all in one place, and consist of a headline and the first sentence or two. I skim through very quickly and efficiently, easily skip past crap I'm not interested in or that I've read on another site, and can quickly jump to the full page or save it for later.
RSS lets me very efficiently sort signal from noise. A dozen different web pages with different layouts, c
UW Pine? Or copyright infringment? (Score:1)
Idiot plugging his lame-ass RSS reader, which is named the same as a famous mail client? Looks like another clueless "developer".
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pine_(email_client)
Google Reader shutting down was great for RSS (Score:4, Interesting)
Google Reader shut down and 10 more readers popped up - and today Feedly is much better than Google Reader was, or ever would be with Google's stewardship. It revitalized things.
I'm not sure anyone thought RSS was dead though, except the people who want it dead like Facebook.
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"Dead like Facebook" sounds too good to be true. (o;
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Feedly is okay on desktop... I used to have terrible performance and lots of "Web 3.0" dynamic bullshit that broke your extensions and made scrolling choppy as hell. They kept making the UI worse too but now it's reasonable again, with the return of the article view mode.
On mobile Feedly is still pretty bad.
Google Reader was better. The UI was simple, performance was good.
The my.yahoo.com feeds disappear and reappear (Score:2)
The my.yahoo.com feeds disappear and reappear all the time. It's especially annoying because they're controlled by Yahoo.
Wait, it's not dead? (Score:2)
I assumed it (Google Reader, and thus RSS) was killed deliberately by Larry Page.
Dead...since when? (Score:2)
Why didn't somebody tell me? (Score:2)
RSS is dead?
Actually, Feedly + Twitter + a well-curated list of bookmarks is all I need to inhabit my Internet bubble.
I do kind of miss Usenet, though.
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I do kind of miss Usenet, though.
Try Reddit some day. It is not the same, but the closest thing alive.
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That's why you use Feedburner, or whatever the modern equivalent is.
Never used an RSS reader (Score:2, Insightful)
Sorry, I'm pretty attentive and mindful enough to know when to check regularly for updates.
RSS served no useful role for me, so it lost from day one.
RSS can lose, nothing can't compete with it. (Score:1)
As it has no limits for control the info, the big ones doesn't support it because they just couldn't release products to compete with its own rss implementations.
That said, for almost th
YouTube support is at best reluctant. (Score:5, Informative)
For the secret handshake, use either:
"https://www.youtube.com/feeds/videos.xml?channel_id=[your channel ID here, alphanumeric string]"
or
"https://www.youtube.com/feeds/videos.xml?user=[username here, but the username is not always the display name. Check page source.]"
and copy that address to your RSS reader.
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YouTube does, technically, support RSS feeds, but you have to know the secret handshake in order to get the feed address.
Or, alternatively, you could google "youtube rss" and find the Google support page that tells you how to do it: https://support.google.com/you... [google.com]
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RSS via CMS (Score:2)
Slashdot users like to bag on CMSes, but one of the many benefits is syndication. Drupal, for example, makes it trivial to create RSS feeds of your content, and also has a good syndication module for pulling in entries from other sites' feeds. My cute little hobbyist site has RSS for this reason, and I have subscribers... Probably just because it was so easy.
RSS is flexible (Score:3)
If you want to bring attention back to RSS feeds (Score:2)
Get pornhub and the like to use em!
(disclaimer, I haven't checked to see if they have one already, and wouldn't surprise me)
Wasn't aware they had gone away (Score:2)
I still get my news via RSS.
Simple, really. If a site doesn't support it, I don't support them.
Self-host TT-RSS (Score:5, Informative)
I think lots of people here have some server running somewhere. Install Tiny Tiny RSS (TT-RSS) on there, and be able to access it from anywhere. Totally open source. https://tt-rss.org/ [tt-rss.org]
What's great is that there are a number of RSS reading apps that you can point to your server, so it doesn't matter whether you're on mobile or on your desktop browser. For Android, I'd suggest just use the app from the same author. For iOS, I use Tiny Reader [apple.com] (App Store link).
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Came here to say the same thing. I have used tt-rss for about a decade and cannot read the web without it. Run it at home and all I have to do is know my home IP and boom, I am good. If the site doesn't have RSS, (or some weird combo of so many RSS feeds it is useless), I don't use them.
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I strongly suggest that you consider a different feed reader than TT-RSS - the developers of that software are Nazi sympathizers (seriously): https://flameeyes.blog/2017/09/03/tiny-tiny-rss-dont-support-nazi-sympathisers/
When I found about TT-RSS's extreme POVs, I immediately switched to FreshRSS, which was quite easy to do, has a much friendly community, nice interface, and most importantly doesn't hate people.
RSS: Rumors of it's demise... (Score:3)
Was just a blatant move to kill it off to get people to use G+ / FB / Twitter so our every engagement can be tracked and sold to the advertisers (and possibly nation-states).
RSS "lost" like Obi-wan lost in Episode IV. It was never really gone.
Vienna RSS reader (Score:2)
Hard to Monetize (Score:2)
RSS - yes (Score:2)
RSS is neat. (Score:2)
Despite the Great RSS Wars back in the days when excessive blogging was the hip thing to do I still think that RSS is a killer concept and bound for a big revival when things get too badly out of hand with social media. Blogging is basically social media by and for the masses and with RSS and some other formats it could replace everything Facebook and Instagram have to offer in a heartbeat. I somewhat expect that to happen sometime in the future.
The main problem with RSS (Score:4, Interesting)
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I Have Long Wished This Had Happened To LaTex (Score:2)
As a nerd, one thing that has really annoyed me is the lack of support for scientific notation on the web. Even 30 years after the invention of the web there is no good way to put scientific notation on a web page. Now we do have the MathJax JavaScript librar, but it is not a standard. It requires a special web server installation procedure, or if you are hosting on a service you have to use the external MathJax service creating an external site dependency, and the browser has to enable JavaScript. This is
Of course RSS has already won... (Score:2)
I would argue that the only place RSS has ever not really sank in is on the consumer side. Everywhere else, we use it all the time, for a lot of things. We use it for spidering, we use it for mapping, we use it for passing news between one website and another. It's incredibly handy, and part of the plumbing of the web. Yeah, we're using JSON services a lot these days for a lot of things, but not this. Not really. Might even be a fair argument that RSS and it's handy nature actually leads to it being pervasi
The OP is a retard. (Score:2)
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So... you use both Outlook's reader and your own? Or did you code up Outlook? 0.o
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Hmm (Score:2)
I found this... (Score:2)
I found this post using theoldreader.com.
My RSS Reader solutions ... (Score:2)
First, I used Tiny Tiny RSS [wikipedia.org] for a few years. It worked well. I ran it on my home server. Written in PHP and using MySQL made it easy to host.
One day, it was choking on feeds from a certain site, and stopped updating.
So I switched to the original MiniFlux [github.com] reader. Again, it is written in PHP, so easy to host. It can use either SQLite, MySQL, or other databases.
The same developer has gone in a different direction, with MiniFlux 2 [github.com], which uses Go, and PostgreSQL (only!). The developer describes it as 'opinionate
RSS never went away (Score:1)
I read this post in Ino Reader (Score:2)
FeedBin (Score:1)
Used FeedBin ever since Google shut down their free service, and Reeder on my Phone.
These days I no longer need a Twitter client to follow people, even Twitter searches. Just add them as a feed. The great thing about it is it's cached and separated into separate feeds for me. So much easier than any Twitter client.
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Why would I use anything other than an RSS feed reader to view RSS? Why do browsers need to support *all* protocols and interaction models?
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RSS is a standardised XML format for publishing lists of articles.
That's pretty much it.
Its strength is that it is standardised, so if you build a reader for the RSS on one site, you've built a reader for the RSS on almost every other site. An RSS reader has the advantage over a web browser that you don't have to wade through all the crud of advertising etc to find the articles. They'll be listed in whatever order you like in a nice list view. The reader can also maintain state so it can flag articles you h