


so I figured that would be a good place to start. I've a list of things I like to host and one of the lowest impact is an RSS reader.

Highlights are saved searches, notifications, filters, fast fulltext search and a flexible, clean user interface. I've just got myself a home server setup and have decided to start self hosting some services. Miniflux seems to be the perfect balance between function and simplicity, It can be installed damn near anywhere as it only uses PHP and a few standard modules, in addition it supports importing and exporting OPML files and the Fever API to allow my desktop and mobile client to keep in sync with no extra work. RSSOwlnix is a fork of RSSOwl a powerful application to organize, search and read your RSS, RDF & Atom news feeds in a comfortable way. The interesting one seems to involve the “Fever” API, which is a simple method of exporting these feed readers out to mobile and desktop readers without any quirky reader dependent applications, my favourite RSS application Reeder supported this API so really helped with the decision of what solution I needed. Thankfully, it seems that a lot of other people had the same issue and a large list of open source solutions had popped up. The Vivaldi web browser, which I've elsewhere called the web's best browser, recently unveiled a built-in RSS reader. Designed for easy use, allowing you to read news from any location.
Self hosted rss feed reader Pc#
This is actually an open source RSS feed aggregator which you can run locally on your PC or host it on a. Open source RSS feed reader and aggregator.
Self hosted rss feed reader free#
With the aim to take matters into my own hands I decided to hunt around for an open source solution that I could self host, I’m already paying for a dedicated server so why not use that to host it? FreshRSS is a free self-hosted RSS feed reader. This issue seems to be replicated across all the hosted providers who are trying to make a profit out of a service Google had supplied for free, and old stalwarts like me still struggle with the idea of paying $3-$7 a month for aggregating RSS.
Self hosted rss feed reader pro#
The biggest (to my understanding) is Feedly which used the shutdown to push their product, unfortunately over time the investment in the “free” Feedly seems to have slowly slipped away in favour of their Pro offering, which isn’t surprising for any company wanting to turn a profit. Whole thing is no-nonsense updates rarely break anything and the keyboard shortcuts are cool.
