Tiny Tiny RSS
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Feedbin
Brieflet is an AI assistant for staying informed. You choose the RSS feeds and source sites you care about, and Brieflet automatically filters out items that are not relevant to your background, role, and interests.
It turns the remaining items into calm, personalized daily briefs, clusters duplicate coverage, adapts explanations to your professional background, and shows what it skipped so you can trust the process. You can further tailor future briefs in simple language, and Brieflet remembers those preferences over time.
Tiny Tiny RSS
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Brieflet's answer:
Brieflet combines user-chosen sources with AI relevance filtering. Instead of showing everything from your feeds, it automatically filters out items that are not relevant to your background, role, and interests, then turns the rest into a calm daily brief.
Users can further tune future briefs in simple language, and Brieflet remembers those preferences over time. It also clusters duplicate coverage, adapts explanations to the reader's professional background, and shows what it skipped and why, so there is less FOMO about what the AI filtered out.
Brieflet's answer:
Traditional RSS readers give users a long list of unread items to manage. Brieflet does the triage first.
Users still choose their own sources, but Brieflet filters, summarizes, clusters, and prioritizes the items based on who the user is and what they care about. It is designed for busy professionals who need to stay informed without reading every feed item themselves.
Brieflet's answer:
Brieflet is built for busy professionals whose work depends on staying informed, including clinicians, researchers, product managers, consultants, analysts, founders, lawyers, and investors.
The common problem is not casual news browsing. It is having too much important material to follow and too little time to read it all.
Brieflet's answer:
Brieflet was built by Roy Schwartz, a physician with a computer science background, because he could not keep up with the sources he needed to follow across medicine, technology, and industry.
The product grew from a simple need: keep control over trusted sources, but let AI handle the exhausting work of filtering, summarizing, and prioritizing what matters.
Brieflet's answer:
Brieflet is built with React on the web, React Native and Expo for iOS and iPadOS, FastAPI on the backend, PostgreSQL on Railway, and multiple AI models for relevance filtering, summarization, clustering, personalization, and brief generation.
Brieflet's answer:
Brieflet is an early-stage consumer/prosumer product and does not publish customer names.
Based on our record, Tiny Tiny RSS seems to be more popular. It has been mentiond 49 times since March 2021. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
Funny that this pops up now, yesterday I was looking into using rss2email [1] and migrate all my RSS reading workflow inside mutt. Ultimately I decided against it because I like being able to use a web-app based reader (Tiny Tiny RSS [2]) both on my work computer and my phone for RSS. [1]: https://github.com/rss2email/rss2email [2]: https://tt-rss.org/. - Source: Hacker News / 5 months ago
Hello there! I just set up TinyTinyRSS (https://tt-rss.org/) at home and I'm looking into interesting things to read as well as people/website publishing interesting stuff. This, among the other things, to reduce the daily (doom)scrolling and avoid the recommendation algorithms by social media. So: who or what do you follow via RSS feed, and why? - Source: Hacker News / 6 months ago
Tiny Tiny RSS is still awesome, twelve years later. It is super-easy to self-host: https://tt-rss.org/. - Source: Hacker News / over 1 year ago
I self-host Tiny Tiny RSS (https://tt-rss.org/). I think it will do everything you want (and more). The web UI is fine, and the Android app is great. It's actively developed, has been around for over a decade (I have been using it since Google Reader shut down) and has been super stable. I guess the only thing it doesn't have that a SaaS offering could do would be some sort of recommendation engine (which I have... - Source: Hacker News / over 1 year ago
Ttrss (https://tt-rss.org/) self hosted. When Google Reader shut down I switch to feedly for a bit, don't remember now why but for some reason I didn't like it. So I started self hosting my own instance of ttrss and haven't looked back since. - Source: Hacker News / almost 2 years ago
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Reeder - Reeder is an RSS reader and client for multiple services.
Matter - Create a feedback-focused culture in Slack with Matter!