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What are some good tech sites you read?
Posted on 2/7/26 at 8:57 am
Posted on 2/7/26 at 8:57 am
Liked the verge but went to subscriptions and got way too political.
Posted on 2/7/26 at 12:33 pm to prplhze2000
My RSS tech feeds:
The Register
Windows Central (kind of crap lately)
IT Security Guru
Krebs on Security
Schneier on Security
Club386
Techspot
Extremetech
Tom's Hardware
The Register
Windows Central (kind of crap lately)
IT Security Guru
Krebs on Security
Schneier on Security
Club386
Techspot
Extremetech
Tom's Hardware
Posted on 2/7/26 at 7:38 pm to prplhze2000
Ace of Spades HQ has a daily Tech News post (always the first of the day) that has some varied tech news that is slightly more geeky, but almost every other post is conservative and political, but you can decide if you want to subscribe and ignore them, or just ignore AoS.
Posted on 2/8/26 at 8:33 am to Russvegas Dan
I've been reading Apple Insider, Android Central, Google 9to5, Android Authority , and Android Police. I notice they regurgitate each other's stories quite a bit. I read XDA from time to time but it gets over my head more often than not.
Posted on 2/11/26 at 9:17 pm to LemmyLives
quote:
My RSS tech feeds:
The Register
Windows Central (kind of crap lately)
IT Security Guru
Krebs on Security
Schneier on Security
Club386
Techspot
Extremetech
Tom's Hardware
Which RSS readers are good today? I haven't used one in a while.
Posted on 2/11/26 at 9:34 pm to TerryDawg03
I've been on Feedly for over a decade. Whatever I used to use was deprecated, of course. I liked to pull stuff locally, but those options just went away. It's sometimes useful in that people will pull posts down, but since I'm receiving them on RSS, even though they're not live, I can still see them in my feed.
My old method was a couple of bookmark folders where I'd open "Daily 1" with a bunch of news websites, and scan each one for new content. Repeat for Daily 2. RSS feeds are so much more convenient and efficient.
My old method was a couple of bookmark folders where I'd open "Daily 1" with a bunch of news websites, and scan each one for new content. Repeat for Daily 2. RSS feeds are so much more convenient and efficient.
Posted on 2/11/26 at 10:08 pm to TerryDawg03
I use freshrss which is a self hosted web based front end. May not be for everyone but it works for me
Posted on 2/11/26 at 10:20 pm to LSshoe
Because I'm old and don't code, can I install it on one local box and have other resources (phone, laptops, etc) point to the local box in order to sync read/unread content? The FAQ doesn't seem to cover using the same source across multiple devices, but I just scanned the TOC in GitHub.
Posted on 2/12/26 at 6:54 am to LemmyLives
The short answer is yes. It's basically just a website you run yourself. Mine is run via docker on a machine in my house and set up so i can access it locally on my home net, when connected via vpn, or from a handful of pre-approved places on the internet like my work's network.
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