

- GOOGLE READER ALTERNATIVES ANDROID UPDATE
- GOOGLE READER ALTERNATIVES ANDROID FOR ANDROID
- GOOGLE READER ALTERNATIVES ANDROID ANDROID
- GOOGLE READER ALTERNATIVES ANDROID SOFTWARE
- GOOGLE READER ALTERNATIVES ANDROID FREE
New features, including search and an Android app, are expected in the next few months. The iOS apps are to be released Thursday. On Wednesday, social news website Digg rolled out the beta, web version of its new reader, which is "aimed first and foremost at Google Reader users looking for a new home." It features easy migration from Google and Google-like keyboard shortcuts, as well as social features similar to those on Digg itself, such as the ability to "digg" (publicly endorse), save and share posts you like. AOL is promising new features for its reader soon, including search and mobile apps. Besides TechCrunch, AOL owns a number of other websites that produce popular RSS feeds, including The Huffington Post and Engadget. Some sites, including AOL-owned TechCrunch, reported that the reader had some glitches at launch, but a day later, AOL said the reader was already at capacity, and was adding prospective users to a waiting list. So far, reviewers seem to be impressed with its speed. This isn't completely surprising given its available resources - namely donations.Ī beta, web version of this brand new reader launched Monday. Their goal was to re-create the old version of Google Reader for themselves and their friends, but they "like the way it turned out, so we are sharing it with everyone." The Old Reader's blog makes it sound as though it may be having trouble coping with the recent influx of ex-Google Reader users.
GOOGLE READER ALTERNATIVES ANDROID FREE
This web-only free service, which has been running as a beta version since it launched a year ago, was started by some developers in their spare time after Google Reader made changes to its look and eliminated social features in 2011. A slower, basic service with a maximum of 64 feeds, as well as some usage restrictions, is available for free. A $24-per-year subscription to a premium account also allows users to add an unlimited number of feeds. Newsblur updates faster than Google Reader, but it commands a fee.
GOOGLE READER ALTERNATIVES ANDROID UPDATE
This is another popular pick among tech blogs and sites, partly because of its ability to update feeds in real time. Some features of Google Reader, such as search within your feeds, aren't yet available, but Feedly is promising them in the future. (Feedly’s normal view is more magazine-like, with lots of images.) It has also launched a large number of apps that allow Feedly to be used on almost any web browser or device, both online and offline, and to connect to the cloud to keep a single account synched across different devices. NewsBlur This is a simple news reader that supports RSS feeds and keeps the new updates synced with the NewsBlur server.
GOOGLE READER ALTERNATIVES ANDROID FOR ANDROID
This free service tripled its user base to 12 million between Google's announcement and the end of May, and has been listed by a number of technology sites and media outlets as one of the best Google Reader alternatives.įeedly is openly courting former Google Reader users with new features such as one-click migration of their account and a Google Reader-like title-only view. Get the gReader app for Android devices from Google Play store.

GOOGLE READER ALTERNATIVES ANDROID SOFTWARE
The software responds to familiar touch and swipe commands, allowing users to interact with websites and apps. Yes, people at Feedly and other companies can do a great job filling the space – and as Sarah Perez rightly points out in this TechCrunch article, it’s not easy as Google Reader became a very sophisticated product.īut if Google decided to kill Google Reader, isn’t that a clear signal that this is not the way to discover content in the future? TalkBack is Google's free screen reader for Android devices.
