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by tholman 2082 days ago
Feedly. Switched when google reader died, and honestly it's filled the hole perfectly, does all it needs to do, has premium options to support them. Fast, and clean.
5 comments

love this product, looking to purchase a subscription to ensure it stays around
Same, it's great.
#MeToo

I need to figure out if there is an export feature, though. I'd like to try some of the other options listed here.

Domo
Same here. Does everything Google reader did for me.
Is the feedly AI worth the cost?
I would say, Mute filers worth the cost, and deduplication. Those are two awesome features.
Happy to answer anything, I work at Feedly. In the Pro+ you get both AI and also Newsletter feeds, Twitter feeds, Reddit feeds, public boards, soon Web Alerts
I think the fact that you've paywalled Reddit RSS feeds which are free is scammy. I get asking money for improving something, but there is no way to just subscribe to Reddit feeds as is.
How is charging for a particular feature “scammy”? Every feature that you want should be free?
> How is charging for a particular feature “scammy”? Every feature that you want should be free?

How is allowing feeds from a particular site a "feature"? They actually had to do extra work to block those feeds for the free tier.

Maybe Gmail should add a paid feature to allow email from Amazon.

No, I don't think so. For example, they have a feature that allows to follow a some twitter feed. Twitter does not have RSS feeds, so they wrote a code to handle that and charging money for that. I'm totally fine with that.

Reddit has RSS. Here is an example - http://old.reddit.com/r/all.rss . To subscribe to it, you need to pay 12 dollars per month to Feedly. And this I think is scammy.

For what it's worth, reddit's RSS feeds are pretty broken in my experience. It's highly likely they had to write some custom code for that as well.
The problem with Reddit feeds is that without using their API (that costs us money) we were getting rate-limited by their servers, so even when we have moved polling to Pro users only, we were still being blocked, so the only way was to use their API to bring Reddit to everyone.
I set up an AWS API Gateway that proxies to Reddit RSS URLs and then I just give the APIG endpoint URL to Feedly. Unless you have a lot of reddit feeds or high traffic ones, you probably won't even break out of the APIG free tier.
ditto