Winds is a beautiful open-source RSS and Podcast app created using React & Redux on the frontend and Express.js on the backend. Use the free hosted version or run it on your own server and customize it as you see fit. Contributions in form of pull requests are always appreciated. Activity Feeds & Discovery in Winds are powered by Stream, the app leverages Algolia for search, AWS for hosting, MongoDB Atlas for a hosted database (DBaaS), and SendGrid for email. All of these services have a free tier.
Not every program listed in the Prerequisites section is necessary to run NewsBlur.
You will want to have your database set up before you begin installation. Fabric can install both PostgreSQL and MongoDB for you, but only on Ubuntu. Mac OS X users will want to have MySQL or PostgreSQL already installed. You can download MySQL or download PostgreSQL. Additionally, if running as a development machine on Mac OS X, I would recommend using MySQL with Sequel Pro as a GUI.
If you are installing MySQL, you will also need the MySQLDB python library:
Stringer has no external dependencies, no social recommendations/sharing, and no fancy machine learning algorithms.
But it does have keyboard shortcuts and was made with love!
Stringer is a Ruby (2.3.0+) app based on Sinatra, ActiveRecord, PostgreSQL, Backbone.js and DelayedJob.
Stringer will run just fine on the Heroku free plan.
Instructions are provided for deploying to Heroku manually, to any Ruby compatible Linux-based VPS, to Docker and to OpenShift.
You can access the keyboard shortcuts when using the app by hitting ?
.
FreshRSS is a self-hosted RSS feed aggregator like Leed or Kriss Feed.
It is lightweight, easy to work with, powerful, and customizable.
It is a multi-user application with an anonymous reading mode. It supports custom tags. There is an API for (mobile) clients, and a Command-Line Interface.
Thanks to the WebSub standard (formerly PubSubHubbub), FreshRSS is able to receive instant push notifications from compatible sources, such as Mastodon, Friendica, WordPress, Blogger, FeedBurner, etc.
Finally, it supports extensions for further tuning.
selfoss is a multipurpose RSS reader and feed aggregation web application. It allows you to easily follow updates from different web sites, social networks and other platforms, all in single place. It is written in PHP, allowing you to run it basically anywhere.
For more information visit our web site.
If you obtained selfoss using Git, some more steps will be required. See the development section.
For further questions or on any problem use our support forum: https://selfoss.aditu.de/forum/
If you obtained selfoss using Git, some more steps might be required. See the development section.
Sources for CommaFeed.com.
Google Reader inspired self-hosted RSS reader, based on Dropwizard and AngularJS. CommaFeed is now considered feature-complete and is in maintenance mode.
Android apps: News+ extension
Browser extensions: Chrome - Firefox - Opera - Safari
CommaFeed 2.0 has been rewritten to use Dropwizard and gulp instead of using tomee and wro4j. The latest version of the 1.x branch is available here.
For storage, you can either use an embedded H2 database (use it only to test CommaFeed) or an external MySQL, PostgreSQL or SQLServer database. You also need the Java 1.8+ JDK in order to build the application.
Copyright (c) 2019 Piethein Strengholt, piethein@strengholt-online.nl
RSSMonster is an easy to use web-based RSS aggregator, created as an alternative for Google Reader. RSSMonster features a lightweight fluid responsive design. The font-end has been written in JavaScript (VueJS) and the back-end in Express (NodeJS). It also uses the Twitter Boostrap framework. Several features are implemented such as marking as read when scrolling, drag and drop style manage feeds, json events, etc. RSSMonster is compatible with the Fever API. Feel free to add any contributions or new features.
Temboz is a web-based RSS/Atom aggregator and feed reader that focuses on saving you time by letting you filter out articles you are not interested in.
It is inspired by FeedOnFeeds (web-based personal aggregator), Google News (two column layout) and TiVo (thumbs up and down).
I have been using Temboz as my feed reader since 2004. I currently have over 500 feeds subscribed to, and my filtering rules get rid of around 1/3 of the incoming firehose of information.
The home page is the article reading interface, using a two-column layout. Clicking on the "Thumbs down" icon makes the article disappear, bringing a new one in its place (if available). Clicking on the "Thumbs up" icon highlights it in yellow and flags it as interesting in the database.
Read your feeds on your own machine with a simple and lite application.
demo: http://cubny.com/lite-reader/
that's it, enjoy a very lite and minimal feed aggregator: the lite-reader