{"id":627,"date":"2015-04-24T17:47:13","date_gmt":"2015-04-24T21:47:13","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.devolve.net\/blog\/?p=627"},"modified":"2015-05-20T09:59:07","modified_gmt":"2015-05-20T13:59:07","slug":"self-hosted-open-source-rss-readers","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.devolve.local\/self-hosted-open-source-rss-readers\/","title":{"rendered":"Self-hosted open source RSS readers"},"content":{"rendered":"

I think I’ve tried pretty much all of them. After the Google Reader-pocalypse, one of the primary requirements was that I could host it myself. Bonus points go to apps that have configurable keyboard navigation (“j” to open the next item must be distinct from “space” to just scroll down in the browser), as well as decent integration on mobile. Here’s a roundup of the ones I’ve tried.<\/p>\n

Newsblur<\/h3>\n

Awesome platform, but way too big for someone looking to host their own personal solution. I tried upgrading it once and broke it. No idea what I did wrong or how to even figure out how why it wasn’t working. Seems very well designed for a massive multi-user operation, though, if you’ve got the Python chops to figure everything out. Newsblur website<\/a>.<\/p>\n

Commafeed<\/h3>\n

Commafeed<\/a> is also a larger piece of software, but requires many fewer components than Newsblur. You need Java, some java tools like maven, a DB and of course more than a little bit of RAM.<\/p>\n

TT-RSS (Tiny Tiny RSS)<\/h3>\n

Nice, but not as configurable as I’d like. This and the rest of the readers listed are written in PHP. There are three larger downsides to tt-rss<\/a>:<\/p>\n