#Newsboat est un lecteur #RSS pour #Linux en ligne de commande, et c'est étonnamment agréable à utiliser.
Comme il ne s'agit que de texte, on est vraiment concentré sur les articles à lire, sans aucune forme de diversion.
Les lecteurs RSS permettent de gérer ses sources d'information et d'exporter/importer ses données d'un lecteur à l'autre (via des fichiers au format OPML), ce qui permet de rester maître de son contenu, sans être envahi de contenus publicitaires.
J'ai fait la bascule #TinyTinyRSS (qui ne m'alimentait plus correctement mes flux) vers #FreshRSS avec l'application « Read You » sur Android. Et bien ça fonctionne plutôt très bien, un grand merci à @marien pour le boulot ! 🖖 #RSS
Et si on dépoussiérait le flux RSS, une technologie qui existe depuis 1999 ?
Lorsque j’ai commencé à écrire des articles et les publier sur mon blog, deux personnes m’ont interpellé pour me demander s’il existait un flux RSS pour se tenir au courant de mes publications en temps réel.
Here is what I’m looking for - a self-hostable service that accepts YouTube URLs, downloads their audio versions, and appends those to a never-ending podcast RSS feed that one can hook to their podcast player.
It should be trivial to hack something like this on my own, but I’d rather ask than reinvent the wheel yet again.
If you want to archive your Mastodon or other app/site feed posts into Obsidian as separate post entries, I wrote a post about how to use the Simple RSS plugin to do that. I cover Mastodon and Grav RSS feeds. I've done the best I can do for now with instructions and a big thank you goes out to simple rss dev Monnier Antoine for being super helpful.
I have this blog set up and ready for writing using a bare, classic web stack with no framework, no static site generator, just html/css files and some short scripts in JS and OCaml.
The only thing I feel is missing is an RSS feed. Presently I am feeling very inclined to just rolling my own RSS using the very same stack (a text editor and scripts) instead of switching to some SSG just to get an RSS feed. Something tells me that this is a sinful, heretic thought.
Ideas welcome on how to avoid such heresy. Encouragement to just do it also welcome.
"But the real tragedy of Reader was that it had all the signs of being something big, and Google just couldn’t see it. Desperate to play catch-up to Facebook and Twitter, the company shut down one of its most prescient projects; you can see in Reader shades of everything from Twitter to the newsletter boom to the rising social web."
Spent a week trying to improve the RSS on my new test Hugo site, because the one they give you is second class, and I had no luck. I broke it 3 times, made it worse twice, somehow erased it completely, so I finally thought hey there's far better nerds than me out there so I looked around, found this, and forked it! https://gist.github.com/LorenDB/2faa2bb78885806c8d4c914d01130e1e#Hugo#RSS
I am at the steadily rebuilding a nice rss feed collection phase, but still pre “omg I need to organize these into folders or something” phase. You? #rss#netnewswire
#askfedi I remember someone posting awhile back about a #Firefox extension that collected #RSS feeds as you browsed, but I can't seem to find it anymore in the mastodon search or in Firefox's extension search. Anyone know of such an extension?
To follow through on my pledge to do more of my #internet reading on the #indieweb, I've been visiting random blogs using this site and adding any interesting ones to an #RSS feed.
My intention is to browse this feed much the same way I would the news -call it a self-care practice. I want to spend more time in reflection and less in panic. I also want to get ideas for, perhaps, my own blog someday.
The sound is pretty involved, so this week I'm talking about just the glitchy looper part. I will make a part 2 soon, to talk about combining the looper with radio noises.