#Aggregator

2004-09-21

Feedreader vs SharpReader

I know I’ve been a little slow posting here over the last week or so, but things should return to normal for a few days at least as things low down a little in my life. However, the hectic pace of life has not been the only thing keeping me from posting as often as I would like, my RSS reader has.

For those of you unfamiliar with RSS it’s a technology that allows you to subscriber to the content of a web site, much as you would with an email subscription, but without the hassle of spam and having to open multiple emails and visit the site every time there’s a content change.

RSS feeds are collected by an aggregator, or reader. Essentially a piece of software (or online tool) that checks all of your subscribed blogs/sites etc, for updates and displays the new postings on screen. You can get a summary or the full post.

I love RSS, but before I go any further, and before someone points this out, let me just say that I’m using RSS as a generic term for all the types of feeds you can get from a site. There are a couple of flavors of RSS, not to mention other standards such as atom as well. But to the end user they make little difference as most feed readers can read them all.

I’ve been using SharpReader for ages, and I love it, or at least I used to. It’s a neat piece of software, has all the features you could want and is still under development. It’s an awesome piece of free software (we love free around here) for the new to average user of RSS, or people who just don’t subscribe to many feeds. I say this because my problems started to happen once my number of feeds increased beyond 500. At 500 (or there about, can’t be sure) things started to get slow, real slow, as it tried to pull in all the feeds, but it’s not a bandwidth issue, it became a CPU usage issue, as it hogged all my resources and it was difficult to do anything else.

Before you say, upgrade your computer, I was running SharpReader on “Danger Mouse”, that’s the AMD 2800+ with 1GB of Ram, and not much else open except maybe Dreamweaver MX 2004. As the number of subscribed feeds approached the 850 mark things became unbearable, and SharpReader would buckle under the pressure, resulting in crashes of SharpReader and of my computer. So, you can see why things got annoying, plus I couldn’t find an option anywhere to turn off the pop-up’s when feeds had new content.

So, a couple of days ago I exported my list of feeds as an OPML file and began hunting for a new FREE news reader. I was pointed to a couple of different services, none of which really floated my goat (as they say) and couple of online aggregators, but the online thing isn’t what I want really. Eventually I found Feedreader and life has been bliss for the last two days.

Feedreader handles the load like a dream, it’s open in the background now, along with Dreamweaver, Firefox and a couple of other bits and bobs. It’s got a clean uncluttered interface, and the way it imports feeds from an OPML file is brilliant. It doesn’t just import them all and let you sort them out later (you can if you want), but it allows you to set up folders first, to group types of feeds, i.e.: Friends Blogs, news, site searches etc. Then as the OPML is imported you can assign individual or groups of feeds to various folders, or chose not to import certain feeds at all. Really cool!

Feedreader still has far to go, and it’s still under development. I’m using 2.7 Build 646 at the moment and it still lacks some features such as threading support allowing you to view connected items together in a threaded fashion.

However it does make up for this by allowing you to turn off the popup when feeds update! Okay, that doesn’t make up for the lack of threading, but it makes me a lot happier as I hate those pop-ups.

I only update my feeds a couple of times a day, maybe 3 at most. That’s once in the morning, once around lunch time, and once in the evening. At 850+ feeds, that’s typically thousands of posts each time which means a lot of bandwidth. While bandwidth isn’t a concern for me in terms of my home connection, it can be a concern for many sites hosting blogs, as some news readers try to update their content every 30 minutes. Imagine, the bandwidth use at 850+ feeds every 30 minutes!!

Feedreader helps avoid this by having the default set to 60 minutes, although I’d prefer to see it set at 3 hours or even 6 hours, but you can always change it to a manual update is as well.

All in all I’m impressed by Feedreader. It’s does exactly what it says on the tin!

#Aggregator #blogging #OPML #RSS #Software

2025-05-19

Vous souhaitez suivre une personne directement dans votre application de flux #RSS ?

Ajoutez .rss à la fin du lien vers son profil #Mastodon, par exemple framapiaf.org/@JBrickelt963.rs

Même pas besoin d'être inscrit sur #Fediverse ;) #FluxRSS #FediTips #FediHelp

#antennapod #CastoPod #Readrops #CapyReader #inoreader #FDroid #Castreader #MiniFlux #Twine #FeedFlow #Aggregator #FeedMe #Podcast #Pluma #Fiper #Flym #Feedly #FreshRSS #Flus #Feeder

aggregoctt aggregocttanza, il sitino della notizianza (nuovo aggregatore news/RSS personale)

Anche oggi pomeriggio, la mia solita bontà creativa si esprime, nella misura in cui ho iniziato (si spera non semplicemente “creato” e fine della storia, visto che ovviamente non è nulla finito) un nuovissimo progetto dall’utilità discutibile, ma forse dall’interesse condivisibile, non essendo nulla di eccessivamente oscuro ma bensì qualcosa che può essere di immediata utilità ed ispirazione per tutti… Ho creato aggregoctt.github.io, un (mio) aggregatore di notizie da RSS, incredibile e basato. 🔥

Se di per sé, da solo, il fatto che ora esista un sito (in più) dove vengono ripubblicati in modo completamente automatico articoli e notizie di vario tipo, da siti più o meno interessanti e che potrebbero o non potrebbero fare forse fin troppo spam (…cosa per cui indubbiamente dovrò trovare una pezza, per evitare di incorrere nel solito problema in cui il rumore sorpassa ampiamente l’informazione), magari non è eccessivamente curioso — anche perché, in generale, ne esistono svariate di queste piattaforme, l’idea di aggregatori di notizie non è nulla di nuovo — è tuttavia per me ganza l’idea di uno costruito e mantenuto a livello personale… 🥰

In questo senso, ci sono diversi livelli di “zamn” da poter osservare. Innanzitutto, boh, chi gradisce il sito e inizia ad usarlo potrebbe finire per guardare le mie stesse fonti, magari scoprendo post o siti interessanti che a me non capita di ricondividere, e penso che ciò non faccia male. E poi, almeno per come adesso il sito è architettato, ossia come completamente statico e su GitHub (anche se per delle cose future mi servirà un backend, per ora non pensiamoci)… chiunque può cliccare il tastino fork e fare il suo sito uguale con i propri feed RSS favoriti!!! Nel footer del sito c’è il link alla repo, infatti — che per ora è una sola, con dentro sia i sorgenti che tutti gli articoli… metterò più ordine (e documentazione) a breve, nel caso. 🤥

Sul livello tecnico è figo, perché è un sito statico con Jekyll, che si aggiorna in automatico… e appunto può essere clonato da chiunque, non serve avere un server personale o la mia solita roba snob, basta GitHub. C’è lo script delle Actions che parte da solo ogni X ore, eseguendo uno script Python che scorre i feed RSS per ottenere i nuovi elementi — addirittura scaricando l’intero contenuto dei post, e le immagini in locale, una mossa furba che potrebbe servirci più tardi — quindi fa il commit per salvare definitivamente le novità, e il sito viene allora ricompilato. (Proprio a proposito di ciò… abbiate pazienza, devo ancora implementare delle ottimizzazioni per bene, che al momento per motivi di scalabilità il sito è tipo lento a caricare.) 💥

Comunque, nella pratica… come mai ho fatto questo? (E la domanda non è completamente retorica, ahimè.) In primo luogo, come al solito io ho visceralmente bisogno di perdere tempo, ma sempre in modi che siano in qualche misura produttivi, e con sempre un minimo di varietà… quindi un giorno sitini, l’altro programmini, e così via. In secondo, anche solo nella vana speranza che questo possa riaggiustarmi il mio programma del sonno, avrei una mezza voglia di riesumare il mio Kindle — che letteralmente da mesi prende polvere, visto che non sempre ho cose lunghe da leggerci sopra, e infatti lo usavo spesso per articoli e cose di questo tipo — ma tutti gli altri servizi a mia disposizione per RSS e simili sono troiai, lì sopra… per cui, avere un sito semplice e veloce, che funziona e basta, può essere la soluzione. 🙏

Ironicamente… al momento proprio il Kindle è il dispositivo dove non funziona, probabilmente per via di qualche libreria JavaScript minchiona, che dovrò quindi addomesticare seduta stante. Però oh, come si suol dire… Roma non è stata costruita in un giorno, e Aggregoctt non è stato costruito in 2 giorni; pure se a vedersi superficialmente parrebbe sia questo il caso. E a proposito… consigliatemi feed RSS interessanti, che qui ce n’è bisogno vitale. 🥴

#aggregator #aggregatore #Aggregoctt #feeds #GitHub #Jekyll #news #notizie #reading #RSS #website

2025-04-06

New feature out today in the #flash news ⁨#aggregator⁩: exporting articles and article lists to #html , #PDF (in A5 page size) and #EPUB formats.

Useful to send a copy to a friend or to catch up with those long form articles on the ebook reader!

2025-03-30

New feature out today in the #flash news ⁨#aggregator⁩: automatic translations.

From the article detail page, logged-in users have access to a "Translate" button which requests the translations for the title and content from a service in the cloud (currently Microsoft Translator).

As soon as the requests succeeds, the original language is shown side-by-side with the translation (or, on narrow displays, one after the other).

The feature is available only for articles in a language different from the instance base language, which for the currently only live instance notizie.calomelano.it is Italian.

2025-03-23

New feature out today in the #flash news ⁨#aggregator⁩: TTS (text-to-speech).

Two weeks ago (see: hachyderm.io/@paolog/114131812) the platform acquired the capability to create multiple lists to save / bookmark articles. Building upon that function, it is now possible to have it read aloud all the articles in a list, using the local #TTS (text-to-speech) voices on your device.

This could be useful for #accessibility or to create a kind of "synthetic #podcast".

For example this short (1' 13") video shows a Samsung tablet reading three articles using the Samsung TTS voices (English and Italian). A light grey background shows the progress while each article is read. The tiny green toolbar at the bottom makes it possible to pause, skip forward and backward and stop altogether the reading.

youtube.com/shorts/5hx9WQzGgps

yewtu.be/watch?v=5hx9WQzGgps

Note: for this to work you need to install local voices (it does not work well with "cloud" voices), and disable the automatic screen locking (otherwise the reading stops abruptly when the screen locks).

2025-03-09

5/5: new feature in the #flash news #aggregator: all lists (including the automatic newsfeed) can be exported as anonymized and public RSS feeds (without authentication) so that they can be consumed by other news aggregators or published automatically elsewhere: just click on the button with the RSS icon to copy the link to the clipboard! This feature has been requested by @katalitika in particular with the objective of creating #element / #matrix rooms for each topic, where a "Feed Rss" bot publishes the relevant article links to bootstrap conversations.

For example this is the RSS for the newsfeed of a user with an interest in neurodegenerative diseases: notizie.calomelano.it/api/list
and this is a curated list of articles of interest for another user:
notizie.calomelano.it/api/list

2025-03-09

4/5: new feature in the #flash news #aggregator: newsfeed customized according to user preferences: select your keywords and every hour the algorithm™ will generate a special (automatic) list of articles called newsfeed, to be found as a special “robotic” list in “Saved articles”.

2025-03-09

3/5: new feature in the #flash news #aggregator: create one or more lists then save articles for reading later, bookmarking and exporting

2025-03-09

2/5: new feature in the #flash news #aggregator: sharing on social media – from the article detail page, click on the “share” icon and open the link to the article in your favorite social network (if you need more sharing options just ask!)

2025-03-09

1/5: new feature in the #flash news #aggregator: full-text search – from the home page, click on the filter button and enter one or more words to perform a server-side full-text search across all articles in all languages; more filtering options (by language, date, length, source) are implemented client-side; all filtering settings are persisted on the device.

2025-03-09

0/5: New features out today in the #flash news #aggregator:

1. full-text search
2. sharing on social media
3. saving articles to lists
4. algorithmic newsfeed based on user preferences
5. exporting lists as RSS feeds

More info in the 5 replies below ...

2025-03-06

'Mean Aggregator is More Robust than Robust Aggregators under Label Poisoning Attacks on Distributed Heterogeneous Data', by Jie Peng, Weiyu Li, Stefan Vlaski, Qing Ling.

jmlr.org/papers/v26/24-1307.ht

#aggregators #aggregator #malicious

2025-02-28

Interstellar v0.8.0 update: Profile & Filter List sharing, overhauled post creation screen, Mbin magazine/user/post notification controls, post/comment bookmarking, Linux ARM and Windows support, too much to fit here...

Interstellar v0.8.0 update: Profile & Filter List sharing,... #mbin #lemmy #app #fediverse #activiypub #aggregator #kbin

github.com/jwr1/interstellar/r

2025-02-27

Google News and Swiss News

Reading Time: 2 minutes

I bought “What Would Google Do? years ago, and never read it. Recently though I have been reading it and it got me to think about why I use the UK and US rather than Switzerland. The answer is simple. Almost all Swiss newspapers are hidden behind paywalls. When you’re greeted by a paywall after clicking you stop clicking.

I would push further. When I click and I am thanked with a paywall I tell Google News not to give headlines from that newspaper. The result is that news sources that are not free to read, are no longer visible.

There was a time when I would go to the Guardian, Le Monde, TSR, BBC news, the Independent and many other news sites daily, and read the headlines, and some articles.

With the arrival of paywalls I stopped visiting all sites that paywalled their content because if you read three newspapers and each one is 360 CHF per year, or more it becomes too expensive. Having said this I used to pay for Le Temps, but because the price is so high I stopped. 400 CHF per year for a newspaper you don’t read that often is very expensive. The NYTimes in contrast is about 90 CHF per year, and the Guardian is “Whatever you can pay”.

Out of curiousity whilst typing this blog post I clicked on two hyperlinks and both of them are behind paywalls. This means that following Swiss news via Google News is a waste of time because you just see headlines.

With the UK and US versions of Google News you can read the headlines. Often when you click through you get content and you can read it. In this environment you are more likely to read from a dozen sources, rather than just one.

In my opinion Google News gives us a central point from which to browse the day’s news before clicking on headline groups, or articles. We then read the article, and then return to Google. Google is driving traffic to these sites, and when people aren’t instantly blocked from reading, as they are on French and Swiss sites, they then stick around, load ads and generate a little income from our seeing a headline and clicking through.

Rather than seeing Google News as a challenger I see it as an opportunity. With Google News it becomes convenient to browse through news articles, identify bias and then decide on how newsworthy, or accurate a news story is. By seeing several sources and headlines we can make an informed decision of what to trust, especially in the age of opinion as fact.

And finally, for me Google News is a useful aggregator from which to visit sites and read news stories, at my own speed. I often find that I keep up to date with the news quite effectively, in this manner.

#aggregator #Google #news

The Roman Arch with tourists in front

Little Bits Issue 21

Interesting aggregation of weblinks that reminds me a little bit of Researchbuzz, but with a focus on mostly tech related material.

adamsdesk.com/posts/little-bit

#tech #aggregator #gaming #OSS
#hardwareHacking #techMagazines

Screenshot of issue 21 of Little Bits.
2025-02-17

Prototype UI for personalizing the newsfeed in the flash #news #aggregator: add priority keywords, banned keywords and select languages.

Code: gitlab.com/simevo/flash/-/comm

Comments are welcome!

2025-02-10

Mbin v1.8.0 released

Mbin v1.8.0 released #mbin #release #activitypub #aggregator #lemmy #kbin #reddit #updates

kbin.melroy.org/media/4d/38/4d

Francesco P Lovergine :debian:gisgeek@floss.social
2025-01-27

I eventually decided that it is time to move my whole feed of tech and non-tech news onto an #RSS #aggregator, that would allow an organization by topic, possibly self-hosted. I can admit to using a cloud-based service, but the capability of exporting my own settings is a must. I would avoid being locked in a system that disappears after a few years, without a plan B to move my feed collection elsewhere.
Suggestions are welcome, because of my laziness in actively searching solutions.

Client Info

Server: https://mastodon.social
Version: 2025.04
Repository: https://github.com/cyevgeniy/lmst