


Its paid version also allows it to read your news aloud, but the free version is already packed with features. One of its biggest advantages over its competitors is that its application adapts very easily to the tablet format, does not require an additional application for this, and supports all RSS services such as Feedly. If Google quickly abandoned its own RSS reader app, gReader is the father of them all, and as such it offers an arm-length list of pre-registered websites that will let you discover the best of the web in a few clicks. It also supports multiple accounts and is one of the easiest to use for adding new sites to your feed. Once they're cached, you don't even need to be connected to read your full-text feeds.From the same developer, it uses its very refined interface and allows you to enable various gestures to navigate as quickly as possible. It takes your favorite partial feeds, does its magic, and converts them in to full feeds, so you don't have to click/tap on those annoying 'Read more' or 'Continue reading' links. You don't need to click through to any website (though, you do still have the option to, if you really wanted). Which is why, unlike other RSS feed readers, that either push you into a browser (in-app or otherwise), or depend on third party text parsing services and require you to be online to fetch the full text of one article at a time (which makes it no different from having to click/tap through to a website), in lire, you get your favorite RSS feeds as they should've been. We find that really annoying, and we're sure you do too.

However, some sites set up their feeds to only show a portion of each entry, you know, to get you to click through to their actual website. RSS feeds are a great way to follow updates on your favorite website.
