A platform for posting (or searching) user-created RSS feeds - Does this exist?
from matcha_addict@lemy.lol to fediverse@lemmy.ml on 13 Dec 20:11
https://lemy.lol/post/35674374

The use case I have in mind: say for example, I read a lot of articles about a certain topic, such as Linux or chemistry or whatever. I want to combine the articles I write into a singular feed, and for others to be able to follow it. Call it “Alex’s Linux Feed”.

Another use case: Suppose I follow a news source (like washington post), but maybe I dont like the formatting of their feed. Maybe it does not have the full article, or maybe it is not organized right (sports news is mixed with political news, and I want to separate them right). So I create my own feed where I organize those same posts better.

The reason this would be a platform because the user should not be burdened with hosting it (even if it is not difficult), and it should be searchable.

Is there any platform like this of user created RSS feeds?

#fediverse

threaded - newest

PhilipTheBucket@ponder.cat on 13 Dec 20:44 collapse

You can do basically all of this with Lemmy communities and @bot@rss.ponder.cat.

You can create a community for “Alex’s Linux Feed,” and add any stuff you want to read to it, and it’ll all automatically get posted there from the linked RSS feeds. Then, if you want to create your own feed to organize those posts better, you can create a separate community for that, and hand people out the RSS link for that community, and post stuff to it by crossposting.

The only issue is that I think it’s possible that Lemmy hands out feeds that link to the Lemmy discussion, instead of to the underlying article, but I can probably make you an alternate RSS link that will instead link to the underlying article, so you can have that as an alternate feed if you want.

How’s that sound?

matcha_addict@lemy.lol on 13 Dec 20:56 collapse

While I love the idea, many RSS users may not use Lemmy, and I would not want to restrict the use of this to lemmy users only. But for now, this seems to be the best existing option. Thank you!

PhilipTheBucket@ponder.cat on 13 Dec 21:03 collapse

Yeah. You can give the resulting RSS links to anyone else who uses an RSS reader. But no one other than you can do it, unless they feel like using Lemmy also. That’s a flaw.