NetNewsWire Turns 23
73 points
2 hours ago
| 10 comments
| netnewswire.blog
| HN
ftth_finland
1 minute ago
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Not to take away from NetNewsWires accomplishments, but getting it was such a disappointment. Adding insult to injury, I had to pay to get the app on my iPad. It was one of the few apps I paid for and all I got was a deep sense of wasted money.

Since the demise of Byline, I’ve been rocking Inoreader and have had no reason to look back.

All I miss is Google Reader, but that’s never coming back.

The only new thing I want in an RSS reader is a handsfree, voice only mode. Being able to listen to RSS articles and navigating by voice commands.

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cosmic_cheese
51 minutes ago
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Hands down the best RSS reader I've used. It's fast, tiny, built extremely well, and has no flab. It sits in a certain class of application along with Alfred and a handful of others in being a standout example of craftsmanship that's reminiscent of the golden era of OS X. More apps should strive for this standard.
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geoffeg
1 hour ago
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I started out with NNW and am back on it now. After Google killed Reader I went to Feedly, then tried a few self-hosted solutions and, in the end, NNW is just the easiest solution for me since I'm in the Apple ecosystem.
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dewey
27 minutes ago
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NNW + Miniflux is my favorite combination and I’ve been using it for many years.
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eitland
1 minute ago
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How do you combine them?
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SSLy
2 minutes ago
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Are you using NNW as a front-end to Miniflux?
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arjunbajaj
1 hour ago
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A truly great piece of software! Been using it for 5+ years.

I think NetNewsWire is a great example of what software should strive for: a useful set of features, while being fast and smooth.

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sharkjacobs
27 minutes ago
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NNW is like a river stone tumbled smooth and with enough weight that it feels good in your hand
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nntwozz
1 hour ago
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NNW is my happy place.

Every time I open the app I feel like I'm back in the era of Mac OS X Snow Leopard and Steve Jobs is about to reveal one more thing.

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SSLy
1 hour ago
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Try GoodLinks if you're looking for something that looks like NNW but is a reading/bookmark manager.
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mmooss
49 minutes ago
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The biggest problem with newsreaders, IME, has been managing large numbers of feeds. Most user time is spent handling redundant stories - e.g., if you have feeds from many major news sources, for each major event you get one or more stories on each feed, saying mostly the same things.

I haven't seen a newsreader solve that problem. Has anyone tried an LLM?

The best solution I know is grouping redundant stories together, possibly hierarchically: e.g., Sports > Olympics > Figure skating > Jones performance. (Fewer feeds require fewer levels, possibly just one.)

That ~ deduplicates the stories and, by displaying them together, you can compare and choose the coverage you like and delete the rest. Otherwise, IME most user time is spent sorting through redundant stories one at a time.

But as I said, I haven't seen a newsreader do that well. It seems like a good fit for LLMs. Or maybe there's another solution besides grouping?

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dewey
26 minutes ago
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That was partially the original promise of Fever, which is the API many RSS services still support and that somehow lives on.

Nuzzle did something similar for Twitter but shut down (https://daringfireball.net/linked/2021/05/05/nuzzel).

That would be a good addition to feed readers, especially for news feeds.

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cosmic_cheese
37 minutes ago
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I haven't used it much but I think Iconfactory's Tapestry[0] does some of this.

[0]: https://usetapestry.com/

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OGEnthusiast
1 hour ago
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A nice throwback to the pre-slop, pre-engagement bait era of the Internet.
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tbolt
1 hour ago
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Add pre-enshittification and that covers the trifecta of doom were in.
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