![]() ![]() New apps such asįlipboard showed how RSS could be used to create beautiful, magazine-style layouts, bespoke to your particular news tastes, whileįeedly took over where Google Reader left off. If the world’s largest organiser of information deemed the app surplus to requirements, then this surely meant that there just wasn’t enough interest from the public to make it a viable concern.īut things didn’t quite go that way. When Google decided to retire its Google Reader service back in 2013, this seemed something of a death knell for RSS feeds in general. While it’s not exactly dead, there’s no argument that the RSS glory days have long since passed.
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