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Hope someone will continue the development of this excellent rss reader


Absolutely no problems here


> Where does one store favorite links so I can handle them on phone and two separate machines?

Linkding: https://github.com/sissbruecker/linkding


Linkding is great, and has some browser extensions to inject your favourites into relevant search pages on the likes of google, ddg, bing, etc, which was a nice idea I hadn't considered before


So you expected to downgrade to the free (1GB) plan AND keep all your accumulated GB's?

Edit: Also, I can see why Proton does not support auto-forwarding mails from their secure environment...


For the not-so-ciritical websites that offer TOTP, I store it in Bitwarden for convenience. For critical websites I use my Yubikey. Best of both worlds me thinks.


For articles I want to read later I use Pocket. It syncs nicely to my Kobo which I like much better for reading long articles than a computer screen.


RSS is not dead for me. I've been reading news/blogs via RSS for many many years now. Self-hosted Tiny Tiny RSS instance and subscribed to 300+ feeds.

Sure, some sites drop RSS support once in a while but sometimes they will enable it again upon request.

If a website does not provide RSS, changes are small that I ever come back. If I really want to keep up to date with a site maybe I'll follow on twitter and try to generate an RSS feed from that :)

RSS is great. The biggest benefit is ofcourse that you don't have to visit every.single.site that you are interest in but also filtering and labeling articles really boosts my daily newsflow :)


I think what's really interesting, and I go into this in the article, that most RSS readers nowadays don't say anything about them using RSS. I don't think it's dead either, but I do think end-users will become less and less aware of it as a thing.


I use Tiny Tiny RSS on a Synology. It pulls feeds every 15. minutes and I filter the entries based on title, content or tags. It has a great readability plugin that can expand the article to full text. I've been using it for years, it's great.


Do you ever cache content offline to read later? This is my current dilemma. On on hand, you have a nice readability plugin and offline content but the plugin may not read everything well or a bookmark which gives the right page with all the content but not offline


Oh man, the stamp trick was so cool!

I had a PO box where all the packages were sent to. I still can remember how excited I was, riding my bike (I was 15) to the postal office and open that treasure chest full of foreign packages. I'm from The Netherlands and did a lot of swapping with people from Belgium, Germany, Norway, Sweden and Finland. Yes, real good times with a lot of friendly people.


Oh, how I envied those PO Boxes you guys got down in Europe - Up north, it was practically impossible to get one of those for non-businesses, and especially a no-go for broke teenagers!


It's funny how there are regional differences in how to avoid the postage fees. I remember friends switching sender and recipient on the letter and then not using any stamps instead. (Not that I ever tried that myself.) I had never heard of the glue trick. :D


Me too. Using Tiny Tiny RSS on my NAS for years now. Love it!


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