How do you find RSS feeds that you're interested in?
I'd like to take my RSS feeds from an aggregator of news to a curated selection of interesting things. Interesting newsletters and blogs are where I think RSS shines, but I struggle to find this content.
I like https://ooh.directory/ - you can find sites you like by category, and it's all oriented around RSS, so you know the feeds work and are up to date. You can even follow this site using RSS to see when they add new sites or categories!
When I find a website I find interesting, I usually use the firefox addon feedbro to find an rss feed in the site. I create folders based on domains or website type to help categorize things. It has worked for a lot more websites than I expected.
I'd go a step further and see if anyone here has recommendations for the best RSS readers. I've never used one, and I'm wary to take any of the ones offered in the Android play store that are going to shove ads in my face. I'd love a quick guide to set them up properly, too. I'm a luddite when it comes to this apparently because the last one I installed, I couldn't get it to grab any of the links.
EDIT: I installed Feedly and it was easy to set up. I don't need it to do anything but grab articles I'm interested in and it seems to do that just fine. I'd just like to be able to unfollow all news/politics subs on the fediverse and stick to articles only. Thanks for the input to everyone who replied.
I used Read You from f-droid app-store and was happy with it. No commercials and FOSS. Switched to Nextcloud News for centralized RSS feeds from my Nextcloud.
I've been using Newsblur for a few years now and it's been great. It's very configurable. They have a hosted version or you can run your own. https://www.newsblur.com/
Another vote for newsblur. And you can use it either as a backend+frontend, or just as a backend and then use a modern "reader only" app as the front. It's super configurable.
Inoreader has been great. There is a premium tier but I've never actually needed it. Nice, polished, professional, and perfect transition between iOS and the web interface.
I've been using Feedly since Google Reader got killed off by Google, and it's been great. Rarely any issues at all, and you can add whatever URLs you want, and i'll try its best to make it into a useable feed.
I just loaded up Feedly for the first time in maybe 8 years judging from the podcasts I was listening to at the time. I'm cleaning it up and hunting for new news sources.
I've been using Feedly, ever since Google Reader was shut down. I've been happy with it and it has discovery features to find new feeds that interest you.
I generally go to a website and if I like the content, I look for an RSS icon. If I can't find one, I'll browse to either [domain]/rss, [domain]/rss.xml, [domain]/feed or [domain]/feed.xml, because most websites that support RSS will have an XML file at that location. This has worked for every site I've tried it on so far, except for Genius' website.
There is an addon for that! I use this: WANT MY RSS. This puts an rss icon in the url bar, if there is an rss feed available for the current website. Just click on the icon, and you are subscribed, if you set up your reader beforehand!
Browse Lemmy/Hacker News/Reddit or just let friends send me articles.
When I find an interesting article check the feed and see if the topics seem interesting.
If it seems somewhat interesting subscribe.
I tend to subscribe fairly easily, if it looks like it may be interesting I add it. But I am also fairly quick to unsubscribe if I find that I am not enjoying a feed.
This isn't the fastest system but does build up a collection of interesting feeds over time. And if you are starting from scratch you can just lower your "interesting" threshold to subscribe to more quicker, then as your collection grows and grows in quality you can prune them.
Most news sites have rss feeds, sometimes even by category.
Tumblr also supports rss, and a bunch of people have fandom specific or aesthetic blogs. Tumblr's tag system remains one of the best, so I'd use that to find interesting blogs to follow.
That's pretty standard behavior of RSS feeds nowadays, unfortunately. It makes sense; if you don't actually go to their website they don't make any money from ad views. How else are they supposed to pay the bills?
There are some RSS apps that will actually go and fetch the text from the website for you but that's usually a subscription service, and it may or may not look pretty depending on how the website is formatted.
I’ve been posting articles that I find interesting that I think other people might enjoy over on my instance at @news I try to stay away from political posting because subreddits quickly became echo chambers with politics and I don’t want to deal with that lol.
I say come on over and check out the stuff I’m posting, if you find it interesting.. I believe most of the sources I am posting have RSS feeds you can subscribe to.
Also as a follow up @amitten, turns out you can take a kbin magazine and turn it into a RSS feed. So technically you can subscribe to my news magazine from my instance with this: https://fediverse.boo/rss?magazine=news
I had no idea! I'm not sure how if I want RSS with lemmy/kbin. I might not want the noise in the RSS feed, you know? Just highly curated interesting stuff.
My question was not to ask for you to find something that's interesting to me. My question was to ask how do you personally go about finding interesting (to you) RSS feeds. Tools or methods was what I was looking for. For example, see @redshift@lemmy.ml and their reply to this post.
I just use different websites I enjoy (mainly technology) I just wish I had a way to hide duplicate articles (from the same website but different feed and also same news but different website)