You can also use your account settings on the NewsGator Web site toĬhoose which feeds appear on which of your devices. Similarly, whenever you read a particular article-or manually mark it as read-the article is marked as read on every other device. ![]() You then choose either Don’t Show In iPhone or Unsubscribe Everywhere.) To do so, tap on the Edit button while viewing the main feed list, then tap on the minus button next to the feed you want to remove, and then tap on the Delete button that appears. On the other hand, the latest update of NetNewsWire for iPhone does let you unsubscribe from a feed, or just remove it from your iPhone view, directly from the phone. (In fact, there’s no way to add a feed directly to the iPhone version of NetNewsWire you must add it via the Web site or the Mac version. So, for example, if you add a news feed to NetNewsWire on your Mac, the next time you sync with the NewsGator server, that feed is automatically added to NetNewsWire on your other Macs, to NetNewsWire on your iPhone, and to NewsGator’s multiple Web-based readers-anywhere you read your news, you’ll be able to browse that feed. NewsGator account for managing and syncing your RSS feeds across multiple devices. But like NetNewsWire for the Mac, what sets NetNewsWire for iPhone apart from other newsreaders is that it hooks into a In syncĪny newsreader should let you quickly skim your subscribed feeds. Viewing a feed (left), an article summary (middle), and the full article (right) in NetNewsWire. However, while this screen lets you double-tap or “unpinch” to zoom in on a Web page, it doesn’t support rotation, so you can’t view pages in landscape mode. Unlike many other iPhone apps, NetNewsWire doesn’t use Safari to view a Web page it provides its own Web-browser screen, so you don’t have to switch back and forth between NetNewsWire and Safari. Alternatively, if you want to view the full article, tap on its title on the summary screen. (One limitation here: if an article summary includes an image, NetNewsWire doesn’t scale the image down to fit the screen you must manually scroll around to see all of the image.) You can quickly move to the next unread article summary by tapping the Next Unread button. (You can’t invert the sorting so older articles appear first, a feature at least one Macworld editor wanted.) Tap an article title to view the article summary and any information about the article provided by the feed. Tap on a feed to view a list of articles in that feed, sorted by date with newest articles at the top (see below) unread articles are displayed with blue type, read articles with gray. This check/sync process happens each time you launch NetNewsWire, as long as the previous check/sync occurred more than five minutes before. You can see the total number of unread articles at the bottom-left of the screen, as well as on the app’s icon on your iPhone’s Home screen. If you’re online-via either WiFi or a mobile network-the program will connect to the Internet to check for new articles and to sync the status (read/unread) of articles. ![]() A setting to choose your preferred approach would be a nice addition.) In the screenshot here, you can see that some feeds are grouped under headings if you have feeds organized in folders on the Mac version of NetNewsWire, as I do, such groupings are synced to the iPhone version (more on that in a bit, as well). (The current version of NetNewsWire for iPhone, 1.0.7, shows only feeds with unread articles earlier versions showed all feeds. be ready.Once you’ve configured your feeds (more on that in a bit), launching NetNewsWire on the iPhone displays a list of those feeds, along with the number of unread articles in each feed. Mikah's App Cap: harbor - don't worry. ![]() Listener feedback: iPhone battery problems and sharing Instagram photos to multiple sources.Austin Mann reviews the iPhone 12 Pro Max's camera. Favorite accessories: DXO One, DJI OM 4, UE BOOM 3, Anker iPhone LED Flash, Lume Cube, Anker braided iPhone cable, AUKEY Omnia 100W charger, Anker PowerPort Atom, Nomad Rugged Case for AirPods Pro, Ringke lanyard finger strap, Gript, Joby Gorillapod, Anker Nano, Anker PowerWave Stand, TYLT VU, Pad & Quill accessories, Nomad Base Station Stand, Nomad Base Station Pro, Samsung SSD X5, iFi hip-DAC, Shure MV88, Apple Watch keychain charger, HyperDrive USB C Hub, 1More Pro wireless in-ear headphones, ReSound GN.Leo and Mikah show you some of their favorite accessories for the iPhone, iPad, and Apple Watch.
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