I have been using the tool, which I called Artemis, for several months. Every morning, I looked forward to my "morning paper" of blogs I love reading.
There are no notifications, read vs. unread states, counts of posts, etc. Only the last seven days of posts are available. The colour scheme is changeable. Dark mode is supported. All popular feed formats are supported.
There is no reading interface to read blog posts; rather, the links take you to the authors' websites. Many of my favourite bloggers put a lot of effort into the design of their blogs and like to change things up; I wanted an experience that embraced that.
The reader is now available for anyone to use (with invite code "hn").
[1]: https://github.com/capjamesg/web-reader
[2]: https://jamesg.blog/2024/11/30/designing-a-calm-web-reader/
I am planning to move the polling changes upstream soon and then figure out a plan for open sourcing the full project.
I'd be happy if someone gives it a go and shares some feedback. I'd say it's quite similar to Artemis; however - you can set different priorities to the sources and the relevant topics.
Cheers - lenns.io
You know how we are with creating accounts just to have a glance...
The description looks solid to me, though.
A newspaper-like projects always gather interest of tinkerers. People love to do things like that for eink devices, export that to pdf to be displayed offline and so on
This could be a nice way to provide clean content, prefiltered.
Edit: just managed to find the support email. I'll send you the OPML file through it~
Really like this.
https://instaloader.github.io/cli-options.html#which-posts-t...
It's not unlike one service that I saw where you'd get email once per day in your inbox, at a specific time.
Have you considered open sourcing it? I would rather self-host something like this.
With that said, I can't guarantee this is not an issue. There are a few feeds that return errors that I need to investigate.
I love your philosophy page, OP ! (https://jamesg.blog/2024/11/30/designing-a-calm-web-reader/)
One of the delightful things about the web is we can all bring our own ideas and designs to problems.
I haven't written about this yet, but one thing on my mind is the importance of good import/export features. With good import/export features, we can all move around and try different softwares to see which ones we like!
But I could be wrong
Substack is also a bit of a pain to integrate with because they have zero useful contact information and direct all inquiries to a chatbot that is beyond useless, makes it so you have to guess how they want you to interact with their servers since there is nobody to answer questions.
[1] Preview of my take of the idea: https://mastodon.social/@marginalia/113670235590972416
I think OP’s project is a nice place to potentially have some default feeds. Both for purposes but also because it’s nice to see some interesting content once you sign up. Maybe even just major news items.
I believe you can RSS most of them. certainly all the substacks.
P.S. I love the colour choices and the colour stripe interactions on your website. So cool!