@mihobu @albertcuesta @glennf @jeffjarvis @brass75 @volkris @mathewi I used Feedly for a few years and then switched to Inoreader. Pretty happy with Inoreader. I forward email newsletters there so I can use the service for RSS feeds and newsletters. I even have a couple remaining Twitter lists going into Inoreader.

Follow

@paul , if you care to, can you give a brief description of the advantages of over ?

@mihobu

@volkris @paul @mihobu I have used Feedly years ago. Moved to Inoreader because of it’s features. Not sure if Feedly has catched up in the meantime. If you have questions for me as a pro user. Let me know.

@volkris

Sure, here are a couple highlights for me.

Feedly works well enough as a feed reader. I noticed that it started having issues loading reliably for me on my Samsung device in later releases.

As a RSS reader, it loads feeds, and does pretty much what it is supposed to do. I wanted to start adding newsletters, Twitter lists and similar feeds into my feed reader and the upgrade to Pro+ was a big jump from the legacy pricing I was on.

feedly.com/i/pro/landing-pro

I heard good things about Inoreader, and took a look. The cost for the Pro plan was better than Feedly's pricing, and it offers me unlimited RSS feeds, plus options to add my newsletters (a limit of 20 newsletter email addresses) and a series of other features.

inoreader.com/pricing

Inoreader works well for me.

@mihobu

@volkris

Some of the choice between Feedly and Inoreader is personal preference. Like I said, Feedly works well enough and if their features and UI appeal more to you, it's a good service.

I just feel like Inoreader works better for me at the moment overall.

@mihobu

Sign in to participate in the conversation
Qoto Mastodon

QOTO: Question Others to Teach Ourselves
An inclusive, Academic Freedom, instance
All cultures welcome.
Hate speech and harassment strictly forbidden.