When did you last use FreshRSS? It now supports creation of custom feeds using XPath scraping. ie. turn a website into a full RSS feed.
Does this work for reddit posts too - including the comments in the feed?
You could probably make it work, but comments could be difficult to include.
Thanks for the reply. Even viewing comments you mean? I can already add posts/feeds directly to freshrss, it must doesn't show the comments. I guess I can just update and try. I didn't know this feature existed!
I use miniflux. To read the feed I use Flux News on android. I don't read the whole feed in the reader, but open the link
I think miniflux supports downloading the source, but I had to do it manually each time when I tried
I live Miniflux but found the scraper to miss quite a few articles. Five Filters seems to work well for these cases
I use FreshRSS - really nice app, using PWA on desktop and a plain bookmark on the tablet
I installed FreshRSS after seeing it mentioned a lot 'round these parts. I typically consume the articles through an android app called Read You which is good at loading entire articles.
This is quite useful to self-host: https://github.com/RSS-Bridge/rss-bridge
FreshRSS with Full-Text RSS behind it, when needed. Web on desktop, Lire on iOS.
Im using nextcloud news and the associated app. I like it because it lets me play podcasts in a player built into the android app. I havent found an up to date rss reader for freshrss that does the same (read you is beautiful, but doesnt have this feature.) And I have nextcloud already up so its easy to start with.
Theres also many plugins for freshrss, including one for rss-bridge that turns urls into rss feeds. I use this for youtube subscriptions. You could also use rss bridge independently, which is what I use for nextcloud news.
I use nextcloud news and app, bur did not know about the FreshRSS plugins. on my way to investigate
I think I have never looked into FreshRSS plugins. I should take a look.
Keep using FreshRSS, just deploy something like fivefilters-full-text-rss-docker alongside it, to get full text RSS feeds from websites, that don't provide them. If you don't want to self-host, there's morss.it. Chris Titus Tech once made a few videos about this:
https://invidious.fi/watch?v=nxV0CPNeFxY
https://invidious.fi/watch?v=Y1Ho_RrF_9I
TLDR: Just using an app on your laptop with good filters (newsbeuter!) might be all you need.
IMHO, RSS readers without decent filters are useless. If you are going to subscribe to even 10, 20 feeds, you will be flooded with articles and have no chance to go through them all. Unfortunately, that already removes 95% of readers from the options.
A long time ago, I had a TinyTinyRSS setup running. TTRSS offers amazing filters and sorting mechanisms, which made it stand out. For example, I subscribed to several dozens of job recruiting feeds and filtered out everything that didn't match. You could also add new filters easily. So if you see many job posts for "Twist dancer" and that is not your thing, you can just filter them out and it gets better over time.
At some point though, TTRSS changed their deployment setup, I think to docker at the time, and I couldn't be bothered reading up how to set it up back then. Something like that. I also heard that the developer is a Nazi, but this may well be wrong. Both together were somehow enough for me though to drop it and I left the RSS game for a while.
A few months ago I started again, but this time just on my laptop. Turns out, the main advantage of a server-based version is that you can read stuff on mobile, which I don't do so much anyway. So first I tried Liferea, which kind of worked but I couldn't wrap my head around the filter mechanism. It's supposed to work, but I tried to figure out which part of the code in which exact format to put where exactly. Documentation and error logs suck, and after suffering for 2-3 hours I left it be. Turns out though, Liferea is mostly just a GUI for newsbeuter, and that is where I am now. The filter language is awkward, especially if you have an older version that doesn't support pretty coding yet (I use Debian, btw). But it works and I'm happy with it now!
Other than that, although a bit beside your question: Many websites don't bother including RSS feeds anymore these days, or even removed them to make people look at their ad infested websites. Whichever reader you pick, make sure it easily supports custom RSS feeds. I wrote a little Python script using BeautifulSoup and FeedGenerator to make my own feeds in such cases and newsbeuter can include them easily. There is also this project for that job:
https://git.sr.ht/~ghost08/ratt
but I didn't look into it in detail.
I made Agriget back in the day, but it's so outdated. Glad to see FreshRSS woth other clients get the most mentions over TT-RSS and all their drama, too.
FreshRSS also has extensions. Hmm, to make a Lemmy Bridge or not to make a Lemmy Bridge..
I use the feedreader from within Thunderbird for RSS. But I just use it to track software releases. Not articles and such.
I use FreshRSS in a docker container both served and funneled from my tailscale network (can't fetch feeds otherwise) and I read it on mobile with FeedMe. My main reason for using FeedMe is the customizable mobilizer though I'm pretty sure you can enable that in FreshRss as well.
Used to use FreshRSS. Switched to miniflux and I'm much happier now. It's very, very simple, very clean, and does exactly what it says on the tin. You may, however, want the less opinionated experience of FreshRSS. You can always try both. (PS. I don't typically use miniflux as my actual reader -- I use reader software for that most of the time, with all my devices pulling from the same miniflux-based RSS source.)
I use Miniflux with Reeder on my phone. It has an option to try to extract the full text from sites that only provide a summary but it can be hit or miss in my experience. For sites that don’t offer a feed I know there’s rss-bridge and rsshub, but I haven’t used either to be able to vouch for how well they work.
I use Flym on Android. Sadly abandoned but still working great. It can import and export OPML, has an RSS search built-in and can retrieve the full version of a piece from the original website.
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