Google Reader is about to be retired – tomorrow will be the
last day that you can use it. That will affect well over a hundred of you that
read Zelo
Street that way, and if you have not already made alternative
arrangements, here are a couple of suggestions as to how you can keep on
reading the blog in a similar kind of way (and no, I have no connection with
any product mentioned).
Don't get stuck with rubbish like this
Already established – and with a one-click Google Reader
import – is Feedly. What’s it
like, and how do you move over to it? The New
York Times has
provided a handy review, which brings the reassuring news that you should
have no problem if you use Chrome or Firefox. However, and there in inevitably
a however, Internet Explorer is a no-no (but I wouldn’t advise anyone to use it
in the first place).
And you have to install a plug-in to use Feedly, but even
so, the people behind the product reckon to have expanded their installed base
from around four million to seven million since Google announced the cessation
of the Reader service. And the NYT’s
David Pogue gives it the thumbs-up, especially if you’re a former Google Reader
user. And an alternative offering, perchance?
Well, there is now Digg Reader
too, which as I type has gone live, although the review in PC Mag
is of the beta version. This, like Feedly, is free, but there are upcoming
extras for which there will be a charge. You pays your money, and all that. Digg
Reader imports feeds the same way as Feedly, from a Google login. Even the
layout is – reassuringly – similar.
The PC Mag review also mentions other candidate successors
to Google Reader. So it’s not as if you’ll be stuck with nowhere to go. Of
course, you can also follow Zelo Street (publicly or anonymously)
and read it that way, plus the Twitter feed and Facebook page are always
available. I express no preference for any one successor product to Google
Reader – that’s up to you, the, er, reader.
Have fun!
1 comment:
As of the week before last, Feedly no longer requires an extra plug-in to be use. It's now completely web-based.
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