This would be a major shift the beauty of Google Reader is that it syncs your feeds with any device you’d care to read them on, and moving to a non-web-based app introduces some complications into the mix. It’s free with some limits (though they’re not very restrictive you can get by with the free version pretty easily) or you can spring for the $1 per month premium version. It’s got nice apps for the web, Android, iPhone, and iPad, it looks sort of like Google Reader, albeit a slightly uglier/busier version, and it even has some cool bonus features, like the ability to see the original page rather than an extracted feed. Our recommendation? NewsBlur, pictured at top. We hear good things about The Old Reader, which visually imitates Google Reader circa 2011, but without a mobile app, it’s not a true solution. Luckily this is not that hard to do you can export your feeds from Google Reader and then import them with any of the services/apps on this list. #RSS READER RECOMMENDATIONS ANDROID#So you want to move on from Google Reader with the least possible fuss, eh? That means you’re looking at a web-based RSS reader, one that can accept your Google Reader feeds before they no longer exist, one that has apps for your iPhone or Android phone and syncs between them seamlessly.
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