RSS Reader: Safari, Newsfire, or NetNewsWire?

by Nate

I’m beginning to tire of Safari’s rather clunky RSS handling and was wondering what readers here at the Hardmac blog use for RSS. Anyone have experience with Newfire or NetNewsWire?

Has anyone tried them all?

Please share your experiences.

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19 Responses to “RSS Reader: Safari, Newsfire, or NetNewsWire?”

  1. xrissley Says:

    NetNewsWire Lite is a very good reader.
    I have tried (in their previous iterations maybe) quite a few, NewsFire and else (even BlogBridge).
    Always back to the free no-frill NNW Lite. because of the seamless keyboard nav, and the cleanliness of it. And the “Open in browser in background”, which a simple right arrow triggers.
    Safari RSS? You are joking, right? I mean, it is a very good intro to RSS and learning to grab your feeds. But once you get a few sites’ feeds, you need a real reader.

  2. iPanic Says:

    I don’t understand what there is not to like about the way Safari handles RSS, infact i hate the way the other browsers handle them, and everytime i try and use something else i expect a safari like look and when i don’t get it i bail.

  3. Almost Daily Says:

    Why not give David Watanabe’s NewsfireX a try? I really like his style: http://www.newsfirex.com

  4. JR Says:

    Netnewswire for me. Love it! Never bothered with Safari’s RSS handling.

  5. Nate Says:

    I’m checking out NetNewsWire right now. It doesn’t seem to offer that much more than Safari’s RSS does though.

  6. sjk Says:

    I’m satisfied with the combination of NetNewsWire and Safari, for now. NNW is long overdue for an update and I’m still waiting to see where it goes next since NewsGator acquired it.

    I like the iTunes-like interface NewsMac Pro uses for organizing channels (feeds) and long ago submitted a suggestion for NNW to consider something similar. In NNW, a feed can only be in in one group (excluding Smart Groups), which limits how I’d like to organize them. I’d prefer if groups were similar to iTunes playlists, which are just different views of items in the main Library, but it makes managing dynamic attributes like refreshing and persistence trickier.

    I have the impression NNW is the most stable of the Mac newsreaders. I can’t remember when it last crashed, if ever, with over 300 feeds now. That’s a big reason the other apps haven’t tempted me much; I’ve heard of more serious-sounding problems with them than NNW even though they’re less popular.

    I’ve never tried NewsFire; the developer “politics” surrounding it have been a turnoff.

    Obviously it’s best to give the apps of interest a serious trial before making up your mind. There might be a “must have” feature you discover that makes the choice obvious. Or maybe it’s more subjective, like which is most comfortably usable for you. It’s kind of like web browsers. People rave about Firefox but its XUL interface is awkward and gets in my way so I prefer Safari, Camino, and OmniWeb.

    Oh, maybe stuff like support and whether the developer’s going to be around for awhile are totally important or completely irrelevant.

    It would help focus responses if you’d mentioned a few specific things that matter most to you in a newsreader. Just asking readers to share their experiences is waaay too general. :-)

  7. mcloki Says:

    Newsfire has worke great for me. I tried Safari but it didn’t do it for me. It certainly cuts down on the time I surf the net, but greatly increases the amount of relevant stuff I read. Good App.

  8. sjk Says:

    Just saw this news:

    Where we are with NetNewsWire 2.1
    http://inessential.com/?comments=1&postid=3259

    Are you still here, Nate?

  9. Nate Says:

    Sorry, sjk, read your brilliant post and forgot to respond. I’v been lost in the hustle and bustle of the all too busy world.

    I think Safari fits my needs pretty well in terms of function. It’s very accessible, very simple, and right there in the bookmarks bar for me. I can use the View All option or select individual feeds. I like the folder organization a lot.

    My problem is the way it handles RSS feeds. On my old macs, it takes too long to open the feed, and the display of it is clunky in my eyes. I dislike the sidebar and the bar at the top is a waste of space. I just feel like it can be done better in a more streamlined manner.

    I’m still trying out NNW (not as often as I’d like) and still have not reached a conclusion on whether I prefer it or not.

  10. Steve Says:

    For a free, open source, Mac OSX RSS/Atom newsreader try Vienna (http://www.opencommunity.co.uk/vienna2.html). It’s rapidly getting a lot of attention.

  11. Justin Says:

    I use netvibes.com because if I’m going to browse the internet via RSS why not do it from my browser I dont get the idea of having a standalone RSS reader only to have to open you browser when you see a article you like to read more on.

  12. Chico Says:

    I run 10.2.8 and the next to last version of NNW/lite works very well on it. I was using NNW Lite for a year, then finally tried the 30-day demo.

    After just a few hours I bought the app primarily because of the built-in browser. Not only is is wonderfully integrated and convenient, but it uses a later, more bug-free version of the tabbed browser code than Apple lets me use (Safari 1.0.3 if you’re running Jaguar).

    It’s not perfect — there’s no visual way to know which feeds you’ve told to temporarily stop refreshing, for instance — but it’s rock solid and currently handles over 560 feeds for me.

  13. john erik madsen Says:

    i have had bad experiance and good experiances let me explain

    browsers i have used

    1.firefox

    2.safari

    3.internet explorer 5.0.1

    4.netscape

    1. firefox

    excellent web browser great for mac does more then safari and offers good compatibility with older and newer mac users

    2.safari

    sucks hardly compatible with any web pages except mac ones only no one else supports using safari any where on the web

    needs a overhaul badly needs to be more compatible with more web pages

    3.internet explorer 5.0.1

    yes the older and the much more basic but consider that this is the only webbrowser that supports all web pages all flash content and works on mac os 9.2.2 and os x

    4.netscape

    rip off mac users have to pay 20.00 for netscape while windows users get it for free
    bull ^&%&^%%^&

  14. LoudMac Says:

    I wish Entourage would support RSS feeds the way Outlook does in the new Office 2007 Beta (PC version). They’re right there, threaded next to your email and the rest of your various accounts/folders/stuff.

    Have to admit, it made me a little jealous though otherwise Office 2007 beta is barely on par with Office 2004 on the Mac. Their new results-oriented “Ribbon” interface is a little weird, but actually kind of neat and useful.

    Your blog is cool. I’m going to add a link to it from my blog:

    LoudMac’s Pro Audio, Music & Mac Blog

    Peace,

    Brian McLeod
    Miami, Florida
    http://blog.loudmac.com

  15. YoramIH Says:

    I have bought NewsFire but I am not happy with it: buggy
    I am trying NNW and, although it lacks the slick look of NF, I think it is generally better. It is centrainly very customizable. I like the Widescreen View (three columns) and the built in browser.

  16. Brian Davis Says:

    Vienna has worked for me.

  17. Island in the Net Says:

    I use the paid version of NetNewsWire. It is a decent application that installs itself as the default news reader. Clicking any RSS link in Safari will invoke NetNewsWire to capture the URL and prompt the user to accept the feed. NetNewsWire displays the feeds on the left, with a split screen for feed items (top) and feed content (bottom). Double clicking a feed item or a URL in a feed will launch the built in browser and take the user to the actual web page for that feed item.

  18. connectionfailure Says:

    No one here has mentioned any of the other web based newsreaders. I use Bloglines http://www.bloglines.com and also netvibes, but I am trying out http://www.newsisfree.com as well. The web based ones are great if you need to see the same feeds without having to synch two readers.

  19. Abel Says:

    Problem with RSS Feed in WordPress.
    I have a subdomain that I installed wordpress for another blog site, but the subdomain site's rss feed points to my parent site.
    Can anyone come up with any suggestions?

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