![]() ![]() ![]() However, if you prefer fitting as much as you can on the screen at once, you can disable them in settings. NetNewsWire also features great-looking inline images that integrate right into your feed. Everything else is only updated when you manually pull to refresh. This way, only your favorite sites auto-refresh on their own. Enabling the Smart Site Refresh feature in settings makes the experience even better. ![]() ![]() I love using NetNewsWire when I only have a few minutes to catch up and only want to see content from my favorite sites. For example, the favorites view is a great way to filter out sites that post a lot of noise so your feed isn’t congested by stories you don’t particularly care as much about. What makes it unique from other news and RSS apps are the unique ways to sort and view your content. I was overjoyed when it recently received a complete overhaul. Photo: Ally Kazmucha/The App Factor The very first RSS app I ever used on my iPhone was NetNewsWire. Reeder 3 for Mac – $9.99 – NetNewsWire Favorites come first A longtime favorite, NetNewsWire lets you see your favorite stuff first.If you want all your news in straight chronological order with zero frills, Reeder 2 is the quickest way to work through and triage tons of RSS feeds. Reeder 2 provides a clean, streamlined, standard feed that’s easy to use and understand. If you don’t use an RSS service, you can also add feeds manually by just entering the website. It also integrates with all the major RSS services such as Feedly, (which is what I use, for those wondering), Feedbin and more. What I love about Reeder 2 is that I can choose how and what I want to read. I’ve been using Reeder 2 almost as long as I can remember using an iPhone. Photo: Ally Kazmucha/The App Factor The first question I always get asked after doing a roundup like this is which app I personally use. Reeder 2 Elegant, simple, just the way you want it Reeder 2 gives you complete control over your feeds and works with several RSS services. These are currently the best of the best news apps available for iPhone and iPad - and why I think they’re so great. If you don’t need a news aggregator service, or don’t even know what that means, there are still news apps that can help you find interesting things to read. No matter what service you use - Feedly, Feed Wrangler or something else - there are tons of RSS and news apps that support them. The iPhone and iPad are both great ways to consume news and RSS on the go, or while simply lounging around the house. Reeder was already my go-to source for reading on the web on iPhone and iPad. If you’re a feed fanatic like I am, the release of Reeder 2 for Mac is great news. Compatible with OS X 10.9 or later, Reeder 2 for Mac is available now in the Mac App Store for $9.99. Reeder 2 is now available for Mac, featuring support for themes, gestures, customizable shortcuts, social media sharing, and more. If you were waiting for something less buggy, the wait’s now over. But the Mac version remained MIA, although the intrepid could download a public beta to help with testing as of last month. Over time, the iPhone and iPad versions came back as a slick, redesigned sequel app called Reeder 2, which supported many of the popular alternatives that sprung up in Google Reader’s wake: Feebin, Feedly, Feed Wrangle, Fever, Readability, and local RSS. Originally available for the iPhone, iPad and Mac, all three versions were pulled last year when Google shutdown its popular Google Reader app. I'm looking for an RSS reader that syncs across my Mac, iPad, and iPhone so that they all have the same feeds, and when I read articles on one device, they get marked as read on all other devices.ĭeveloped by Silvio Rizzi, Reeder is perhaps the slickest RSS and feed reading app out there. ![]()
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