I use NNW on both my Mac and iPhone now (Reeder is also a great app for both), but if you prefer to mix it up, it’s nice to have a middleman like Feedbin, because lots of RSS apps sync with Feedbin, so I can use a different app on my Mac than I use on my other devices.īest of all, NetNewsWire is free and open-source (and Feedbin itself is open-source but charges a small fee to cover server costs). When I want to subscribe to a newsletter, I give the site a unique Feedbin email address for my account, and emails that go to that address will show up as though they’re RSS feeds in my apps. A lot of sites have newsletters but no RSS feeds, but that’s no problem. My favorite Feedbin feature is its support for email newsletters. You can even use Feedbin directly as an RSS reader they have a web and iOS app. Feedbin keeps all my subscriptions and it keeps track of which items are read and unread and syncs that to NNW. To keep my RSS subscriptions in sync between my devices I use Feedbin. NNW has an iOS (and iPadOS) counterpart, and it lives up to its Mac sibling of offering very standard native UI with no frills and great performance. NetNewsWire is blazing fast and feels light. And it feels like a Mac app in the way that apps only do when the developer puts a good deal of care into making a great Mac app. It uses a beautiful and standard Mac interface. But once you get to know it, it’s quintessentially a Mac app. At first it might feel a little spartan, but it is nonetheless quite full-featured as a reader. ![]() When you look at NetNewsWire you can just tell it’s a Mac app through and through.
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