Alternatives to Google Reader for OS X and iOS users

Google caused a stir yesterday when it announced that it will shut down Google 
reader this summer. Though you have a few months to migrate to a new RSS 
reader, now is the time to start looking at alternatives.

We've compiled a list of web services, OS X clients and iOS apps for you to 
consider while you prepare to make the switch. Don't be quick to abandon your 
favorite apps just yet, as most will likely migrate away from Google Reader in 
the next few months. Both Reeder and Feeddler, two popular Google Reader 
clients, have said they are not going away.

If you have any suggestions for clients or services not mentioned in this post, 
please share them in the comments.

Web Services

Feedly

Feedly is a news aggregator with a newspaper-like flair. It has its own iOS and 
Android apps so you can setup your feeds in the browser and view them on your 
mobile devices. There's no desktop app, but you can use Fluid to create one.

In response to Google's announcement, Feedly said it has been working on a 
clone of the Google Reader API that could easily replace Google Reader both in 
Feedly and in other popular Google Reader apps.

Newsblur

Newsblur is another news aggregator that pulls down stories from your favorite 
blogs, podcasts and YouTube channels using their URL or RSS feed. You can 
access your news via the web, iPad, iPhone or Android device. The basic service 
is free while a premium account (US$1 per month) adds extra features like 
unlimited sites, private shares and more.

Feed Wrangler

Feed Wrangler is an RSS aggregator service from David Smith that is ready to 
enter beta testing. He describes it as a backend syncing/aggregation 
subscription service with web and native clients. Smith started work on the 
service as a replacement for Google Reader and planned to launch it this 
summer. After Google's big announcement, those plans have been moved up. You 
can sign up on Feed Wrangler's website to be alerted when the service is ready 
to launch.

Feedspot

Feedspot, created by Anuj Agarwal, is another startup service that's building a 
new RSS platform to replace Google Reader. It already has a working website and 
you can create a login to check it out for free. Feedspot lets you import your 
Google Reader feeds.

Bloglines

Bloglines is another online agregator that lets you subcribe, manage and share 
news feeds and other web content. It's been around since 2003 and has changed 
hands a few times. Now owned by MerchantCircle, Bloglines is one of the largest 
news and feed aggregators using RSS. It is web-based; there are no native apps.

Fever

Fever is a PHP and MySQL application that you run on your own Apache server. 
Fever serves up your RSS feeds and rates them so you can see the hottest 
stories first. It's not for everyone and developer Shaun Iman, who created 
Fever, has some tips for those considering switching to this self-hosted 
option. There is a $30 one-time fee to use the software. There's also a native 
iOS client, Sunstroke, created by Gone East.

OS X Apps

Readr, $4.99

Readr is a basic RSS client capable of reading Atom and RSS feeds. You'll see a 
setting for syncing with Google Reader, but that is optional, not required. The 
app also integrates with Pocket, Instapaper, Readability and Evernote.

NewsRack, $7.99

NewsRack is a basic RSS reader for Mac OS X with a keyboard-friendly, tabbed 
interface. Syncs with Google Reader, but that feature is optional, not 
required. Created by Ole Zorn, the developer behind Pythonista for the iPad, 
Newsrack hasn't been updated in a over a year. Hopefully, the Google Reader 
News will be incentive to bring some fresh features to the app.

Pulp, $9.99

Pulp takes your favorite news feeds and presents them in an magazine-style 
layout. You can scan through previews and quickly find the stories that 
interest you the most. You can export your current Google Reader feeds as an 
OPML file and import them into Pulp for OS X. Pulp works on the Mac & iPad.

Headlines, $1.99

Headlines brings together the news you are interested in and displays the 
content in newspaper-style columns. It supports RSS feeds and lets you organize 
them into 7 pages of content. This is a good option for someone with a smaller 
RSS feed portfolio.

Feedy $2.99

Feedy is an RSS reader that uses Twitter and Facebook to score the items in 
your feeds. Those topics with a high rating float to the top of your news 
stream. It's designed to help you find the news that you care about.

iOS Apps

Rss Runner, Free

RSS Runner is a non-Google Reader client that supports 9 different feed 
formats, offline reading and background downloading. It'll import your current 
feeds from Google Reader as well.

News, $0.99

News App is a basic RSS Reader for the iPhone and iPad. No accounts (Google, 
Yahoo!, etc.) of any type are required. It's not as robust as the more popular 
Google Reader-based apps, but it will still work a few months from now.

xFeed RSS Reader, Free

xFeed is a lean RSS Reader for the iPhone and iPad. Like the News app, it's not 
as robust as the more popular Google Reader-based apps, but it will still work 
a few months from now.

TLDR, Free

TLDR is a news aggregator that pulls down 100 feeds from 14 news categories. 
The app gives you short summaries of each article so you can quickly decide 
which story to read. If you are tired of managing RSS, TLDR is a nice 
alternative.

Zite, Free

Zite is a news service instead of an RSS reader. The service scans news stories 
and pulls down those articles that match your areas of interest. It's not a 
replacement for your RSS reader, just a different way of consuming your news.

Alternatives to Google Reader for OS X and iOS users originally appeared on 
TUAW - The Unofficial Apple Weblog on Thu, 14 Mar 2013 11:00:00 EST. Please see 
our terms for use of feeds.

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http://www.tuaw.com/2013/03/14/alternatives-to-google-reader-for-os-x-and-ios-users/

(via Mr. Reader)

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