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Choosing an RSS News ReaderViews: 1616
Sep 13, 2009 4:58 amChoosing an RSS News Reader#

John Stephen Veitch

I've been a heavy user of the Internet for 18 years. I kept a hand written journal for 24 years before that. When blogging first became possible I was a reader, although not a writer in the beginning. If we wanted to follow a blog we subscribed to an email notification, which is one reason why I get so much mail.

In July, 2009, here in Christchurch NZ, I collected data about how people really use the Internet. I asked people to give me NUMBERS, no opinions, about their Internet use. One surprising number was that of 90 people who responded, only ONE wrote a blog, and he had not updated for some time. Even more surprising was that only THREE people read blogs. Those numbers seem incredibly at odds with what most surveys tell us. The reason for that is in the methodology. Both sets of data are correct. e.g. "80% of Internet users read blogs." The question was "In the last 12 months have you ever read a blog?". My data says "3% of Internet users read blogs" and my question was "How many blogs did you read in the last 7 days". 97% of my respondents replied NONE.

Another startling statistic. Not a single person in my sample uses an RSS Reader. Now at the time I didn't use a reader either. I had FeedDemon on my computer, but I never opened it. Installed but never used in 2+ years. For me the old email system worked OK, and I'd never bothered to change. But now I'm interested, why don't people use RSS Readers, or News Readers? Essentially because they don't know about them.

RSS stands for really simple syndication, which explains exactly nothing. It's a formatted text feed, with integrated pictures and video, so in a reader it presents like an electronic newspaper. Depending on the source, you get a heading and the first 250 words or so, or you get the full feed. Clicking on the heading opens the original source in your browser. News readers have lots of tricks for searching for information and saving the very best, and for discarding the rest.

Every Internet user should as part of his or her daily routine open a News Reader. That news reader should be subscribed to RSS Feeds from people or information sources that interest you. You should be getting the FEED, and not the EMAIL. It saves a lot of TIME. Also because it's so much easier to do, you'll actually end up reading much more, and being better informed.

What Feed Reader should you use?

My knowledge here is suspect. I've only ever used FeedDemon to any extent. I've had a play with Google Reader, and that seems OK too. Here is what a few hours work tells me. First of all there is a fundamental choice; do you use Google or not?

Google Reader and variations.

Google Reader is widely praised as being easy to use and with lots of tools and shortcuts to suit many needs. I found in my short time using it that I quickly adapted to it's style.

FeedDemon 3.0 is a standalone programme that synchronizes with Google Reader. If you are at home you use FeedDemon because you prefer it's style and functions, but if you are somewhere else, all your feeds are also available on Google Reader.

NetNewsWire 3.2 (Mac Users) This is the Mac version of FeedDemon.

Feedly is a Firefox Browser addon that links to Google Reader.

Other Options:

NewzCrawler 14 day free trial - US$24.95

Amphetadesk is a free, cross platform, open-sourced, syndicated news aggregator - it obediently sits on your desktop, downloads the latest news that interests you, and displays them in a quick and easy to use.

Bloglines (Web Based) Voted Best Blog/Feed Search Engine by the Search Engine Watch Awards in 2005



John Stephen Veitch; The Network Ambassador
Open Future Limited - http://www.openfuture.co.nz/
Innovation Network - http://veech-network.ryze.com/
Building an Open Future - http://openfuture-network.ryze.com/

Private Reply to John Stephen Veitch

Dec 11, 2009 11:45 amre: Choosing an RSS News Reader#

x x
I've been using RSS readers for over 6 years now. I started with Feedreader ( http://www.feedreader.com/ ) probably the oldest RSS reader. Switched over to FeedDemon when it was first launched as a beta product and had a love/hate relationship with it as it developed and was finally sold to Newsgator. I've used Google reader also for quite a while. However, Bloglines is the one which I've always been most satisfied with. It can handle hundreds of RSS feeds without making it difficult for me to scan through them. It is faster for me than any other reader that I've tried (and I think I have tried all of them). The only issue is that it only shows the last 200 posts and there's no option to split the posts into pages.

Private Reply to x x

Jan 03, 2010 10:02 pmre: Choosing an RSS News Reader#

Fernando Santos
In what concerns to RSS (and ATOM) readers, I like the " Opera Browser " functionality. It is so simple to use! Everyone can use it. The download Link is http://www.opera.com/download/.

How to use it:

That is not my buziness, but it works strait and easy.

Anywhere you see the RSS or Atom click on it.
You will see the content of the feed and an option " Subscribe ".

Click on " subscribe " that is all.

Now the feed reader in " Opera " will search for changes regulary in that feed. The standard will work just fine.

If you want a link to try it, you can use this one
http://my.opera.com/doiokaosos/xml/rss/blog/

Get Connected!

Private Reply to Fernando Santos

Jan 04, 2010 5:09 amre: Choosing an RSS News Reader#

Warren Contreras
The part of your research that could easily modify the results you found is to include how many people respond to polls? Oh I guess those who don't wouldn't answer, so the findings would still be slanted.

I do have Google Reader set up, but I seldom check it. I read blogs every day, but it's because some post on a forum or Twitter attracted me to a current post. Looking in Google Reader just now, I saw that none of the blogs I chose to follow had a post in the last 2 months and the ones that did, were just trying to sell me something. So much for that.

I should clarify that I only spend time online to make contacts and have no real business to promote. I earn my current online income in 10 minutes a day, so what I do with the rest of my time is share with others and try to help everyone I can. I prefer to do that in ACTIVE venues and forget what all the Guru's tell me.

But that's just me.

Warren Contreras
http://WarrenContreras.com

Private Reply to Warren Contreras

Jan 29, 2010 2:24 amre: re: Choosing an RSS News Reader#

Liz McGowen
I honestly don't know what I'd do without my google reader. I use it every day to read the blogs I follow, and put into it "google alerts" on particular issues or keywords I'm following.

There's also a Blackberry app, so I can catch up on my reading anywhere.

I also use "flock" as my browser, which works well with my blog and with google reader. When I find something I want to include on my own blog, I just save it onto the browser's little clipboard and then the link is there when I'm ready to write.

Enjoy!

-liz

Liz McGowen
Blog: http://www.MLMNetworkMarketingLeadTips.com
Twitter: @lizziemcg

Private Reply to Liz McGowen

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