![]() ![]() I just read one (or mine) and easily nuke the rest right away. So I’ll see four or more NYT articles that are the same but not all posted at the same time and were posted in business, technology, science, etc. Usability The app is fully accessible with VoiceOver and is easy to navigate and use. Version 6.0 Free or Paid Free Version Of macOS App Was Tested On 11.2.3 Accessibility Comments Fully accessible and works well with VoiceOver. ![]() NetNewsWire 5 is a thoughtfully-designed, fast app with powerful search. For the true reading lover, NetNewsWire easily keeps track of multiple articles open at the same time. The time and hard work by Simmons and other contributors to the open-source project are apparent. No doubt you are scratching your head, ‘I thought styles were written with CSS’, you may think, ‘What have cookies got to do with how my feeds look ’. NetNewsWire 5 is an all-new, free app rebuilt from the ground up using Evergreen’s code, but bearing the name of Simmons’ original feed reader. It’s especially handy if you read a bunch of, say, NYT feeds as they cross post a lot. NetNewsWire is free and open source, but it’s not the free alternative to apps such as Reeder and Unread. NetNewsWire style with free cookies Posted 4 February 2006 Updated 4 December 2006 This is a relaunch of Ollicle Flex, a style for NetNewsWire which makes use of cookies. In fact I read my feeds almost exclusively using these topic filters, and only at the end look at the remaining unread. ![]() I have topic-selective “feeds” like the Ukraine war, climate change, etc. NewsGator, which acquired Seattle developer Brent Simmons’s NetNewsWire software in 2005 and hired Simmons, announced updates for its major newsreading applications their applications are all available at no cost. I have a huge “Junk” filter (podcasts, stories about movies, other crud I don’t want) that I scan first and mass-mark-as-read. NetNewsWire 3.1 is the latest release of the long-developed news aggregator of RSS and Atom feeds and it’s now free. That way I could quickly scan down the list, read any I wanted to (few - they were mostly the same) and then mark all as read with a couple of keystrokes. So, example when news about the Queen flooded my feeds, I made “smart feed” (in ReadKit) that matched `not read & (“title contains Queen” || “title contains Royal” …)` similar to a “smart mailbox” in apple mail, and using the mac’s system widget for generating such filters. ![]()
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