

- #NETNEWSWIRE IPHONE FOR MAC#
- #NETNEWSWIRE IPHONE SERIAL#
- #NETNEWSWIRE IPHONE UPDATE#
- #NETNEWSWIRE IPHONE MANUAL#
- #NETNEWSWIRE IPHONE FREE#
Although NetNewsWire 5 for Mac remains stubbornly limited to Feedbin and locally imported feeds, the mobile edition adds sync with my preferred service Feedly to the mix. Get in syncĪlthough there was little reason to sync RSS feeds with other devices prior to smartphones and tablets, it would be inconceivable to release an app without it today. On iPad, there’s additional support for multiple windows and-with the right accessory attached-nearly 30 keyboard shortcuts, which make the app feel more like the desktop version.
#NETNEWSWIRE IPHONE MANUAL#
On the iPad, there are nearly thirty keyboard shortcuts available to make the tablet version more like the Mac.ĭespite remaining faithful to the macOS aesthetic, NNW 5 takes full advantage of iOS, with excellent support for Siri Shortcuts and system-wide Dark Mode (a manual toggle switch for the latter would be welcome, however). If you like to tweak text size or font style, for example, this is not the news reader for you.
#NETNEWSWIRE IPHONE UPDATE#
(It’s a testament to Simmons’ coding prowess that not a single “hot fix” update has been necessary during the first month of availability.) One downside to being so nimble is there’s not much in the way of custom display options.
#NETNEWSWIRE IPHONE FREE#
However, it does not support nearly as many external synchronization as Newsboat does (only Feedbin, which is commercial, while I can self-host and prefer an open protocol).Where competing apps frequently get bogged down with complexity and feature bloat, NetNewsWire 5 for iOS remains lean and most importantly, free of the pesky bugs which increasingly seem to infect modern apps. NetNewsWire looks good (Vienna looks like macOS did 15 years ago). (example:įor example, for NextCloud/OwnCloud (which I opted for, as I already run NextCloud, and have no clue whatsoever which one I should be otherwise using) you need to add urls-source "ocnews" in ~/.newsboat/config and furthermore configure ocnews-url, ocnews-login, and ocnews-password. Read from the local urls file regardless of this setting. Old Reader support, to newsblur, which enables NewsBlur support, orįeedhq for FeedHQ support, or ocnews for ownCloud News support, or Tiny Tiny RSS support, to oldreader, which enables newsboat's The OPML online subscription mode, to ttrss which enables newsboat's By default, this is ~/.newsboat/urls.Īlternatively, you can set it to opml, which enables newsboat's This configuration command sets the source where URLs shall be Urls-source (parameters: default value: "local") Using Newsboat (a TUI RSS reader) as standard, I'd say the following backends are applicable: Your client then needs to sync two-way with such a backend. You can self-host a backend such as Nextcloud News, TT-RSS, FreshRSS. I've partly figured out the answer to my question. Because of that I regularly find out I've skipped chapters. one of the defunct serials I used to follow would publish a page per day), and so pocket is a mess of interspersed normal articles to read later and chapters from dozens of serials.
#NETNEWSWIRE IPHONE SERIAL#
The issue is mostly that serial entries can accumulate rather fast in pocket (especially for those with small frequent entries e.g. "RSS to pocket" isn't really the issue, going through my RSS feed, reading the regular entries and sending the serials to pocket isn't much of a drain / difficulty. > You can automate the RSS-to-Pocket (or other read-it-later service) part with tools such as If This Then That. I really need to knuckle down and play with epub, seeing how googling around doesn't seem to yield anything useful. That is sort of the things I've considered, however each serial's feed really is a single work being updated (mostly append-only I guess, I don't know how many serials authors go back and significantly rework previous entries) and I don't know how well epubs and their clients deal with updates / additions (without intermediate proprietary storefronts). > Personally, I "solved" a similar issue of mine (collecting posts I want to read in a weekly EPUB and send them on my Kindle) with Pocket and a web service called Crofflr. So I guess you want to collate the posts rather than the feed entries themselves.

They may syndicate limited content, may contain ads, etc.

I think RSS are the wrong starting point for such a task.
