![]() ![]() After all, it’s been almost two years since the launch of the App Store now, it may be hard to believe that no one has nailed a simple feed reader app yet. If you haven’t been using the iPhone for a long time, news of a great feed reader may sound lackluster to you. And, there is also an option to only cache images if you’re connected to WiFi, to keep things moving alone. Previously, as I mentioned, syncing was slow. (And yes, there is also a button to mark all as read.)Īs you’d expect, Reeder gives you the ability to sync feed items locally so that you can read them when you don’t have an Internet connection, such as on a plane. Swiping left toggles between starred and unstarred status. Swiping right toggles an item between read and unread status. In Tweetie, when you swipe a tweet, a bunch of options are shown under that tweet. There are a half dozen other features which you can customize in the app.īut maybe my favorite feature of Reeder is the Tweetie-like ability to swipe an individual feed item to do something. For example, on this overlay menu, you can make a Google Reader note about an item, you can share it with your Reader friends, you can save it to Instapaper, you can send it to Twitter, you can open it in Safari, you can mail it to someone, etc. And in the story-view mode you have a new set of options along the bottom that let you mark an item as unread, star it, or a button to load a range of great Reeder features. Obviously, clicking on an individual story loads that item (including any images). I can sort these by individual feeds or by time in which the items came in. So, for example, when I click into my “tech” folder, I see all the unread feed items that have appeared since the last time I opened Google Reader. Assuming you group your feeds into folders in Google Reader, navigation is Reeder focuses on that. The only other icon down there (on the main screen) is a reload button to load in new feed items. These are the three key areas across the bottom of the app. Rather than trying to cram is all of the clutter items that Google Reader itself now crams into its own site, Reeder focuses on three key areas: Unread items, Starred items, and All items. So what makes it so good? Well, first of all, it’s simple. In fact, I’m so sure of it, that I’ve already placed it on my the first page of apps on my iPhone screen. I have absolutely no doubt this will be one of my most-used apps now. But the latest version, 2.0, which just went live in the App Store last night, corrects all the issues I had with it. Unfortunately, it has also been clunky, and slow, and lacking some features such as state-saving. But that changes, today.Īn app called Reeder, by Silvio Rizzi, has always been a nice-looking app that syncs with Google Reader. And I’m hardly the only one who thinks that. And sadly, all the Google Reader applications that have launched over the past few years have, in my opinion, sucked. ![]() But I’m increasingly finding myself browsing for news on my iPhone. Even though other sources such as Twitter and Facebook are now better at uncovering news more quickly, Reader remains a great catch-all backup plan for the content I read online. One of about a half dozen tabs that I always have open in my web browser on my desktop or laptop is Google Reader. ![]()
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