9 comments

  • celsoazevedo1 minute ago
    I tried to switch from a popular cloud service to a self-hosted solution last month, and tested some of the different open-source options.<p>Different UIs aside, one of the issues I kept having was that some of my feeds wouldn&#x27;t load because sites now have a bot&#x2F;scrapping&#x2F;AI protection in place (Cloudflare, Anubis, etc), breaking RSS readers. And that was with a residential IP, it was even worse if I routed traffic via a popular VPS or VPN provider.
  • kev0094 hours ago
    I like Miniflux becuase it is easy to run and keeps a centralized status if you have multiple devices. I guess if Thunderbird supported the Fever protocol you could use them together unless there is some other method I&#x27;m not aware of?
  • dugite-code33 minutes ago
    I still perfer the TT-RSS, now on github without Fox (The dev most people had issues with).<p>The android app isn&#x27;t maintained at the moment but it&#x27;s still one of the best rss apps I have ever used
  • dizzy92 hours ago
    This may be a good alternative to the various web-based services, which suffer from various limitations (cost money, display ads, limited number of feeds, limited retention, annoying features you don&#x27;t want, etc). The email-style user interface is also familiar, and you can set up filters to ignore or star certain stories.<p>Assuming you don&#x27;t need syncing across devices, the main drawback to self-hosting is that it only receives updates while your PC is switched on. Some feeds update often enough that you&#x27;ll miss stories if you don&#x27;t grab them multiple times per day.
  • cristoperb5 hours ago
    &gt; Thunderbird delivers RSS feed items the same way as email, so you can apply filters to mark them as &quot;read&quot;<p>This is a good idea. I use Thunderbird only for a small number of feeds I want to read every post from. I used to also use a separate feed reader for my &quot;river of news&quot;, but eventually I stopped looking at that and just loadded hackernews or reddit when I wanted a distraction. But I might try Thunderbird for more feeds and just auto-mark most of them as read so I can browse at my leisure.
  • mathnode2 hours ago
    Yes I have been doing this for years. I also have my gmail account plumbed in so I have a local copy of my emails; easy archiving. And yes I manually copy my opml changes across devices and I like it!
  • beached_whale3 hours ago
    The issue I have with Thunderbird and RSS is that there&#x27;s no good way to do a show me the unread only and keep the feed folders. You can do a search folder or show unread folders but that affects mail too.<p>Or I don&#x27;t know how
  • Aldipower4 hours ago
    I use Thunderbird to consume the changelog of my very own software. I can confirm, it works great! I get always notified accurately when something changed I changed.
  • einpoklum4 hours ago
    Man discovers long-available UI in common app, which he has not noticed before! News at 11!
    • Hobadee1 hour ago
      Pretty sure I was using TB to read RSS back in 2006 or something like that...
      • scorpioxy4 minutes ago
        Both of these comments are needlessly snarky. Although it is true that the RSS capability of Thunderbird has been around for quite a while, I enjoy articles that simply reflect the author&#x27;s discovery or use case.<p>Like you, I was consuming RSS through Thunderbird around that time as well and thought it was really good. I have since moved to something else(many times) as my needs have changed.<p>In the spirit of HN, the poster maybe wanted a discussion of how the use of RSS has declined and walled gardens took its place which is not good for the longevity and usefulness of knowledge.