FeedDeck
FeedDeck is an open source RSS and social media feed reader, inspired by TweetDeck. FeedDeck allows you to follow your favorite feeds in one place on all platforms.
Cost / License
- Subscription
- Open Source
Application types
Platforms
- Mac
- Windows
- Linux
- Online
- Android
- iPhone
- Android Tablet
- iPad
- Flathub
- Flatpak
FeedDeck News & Activities
Recent News
Recent activities
POX added FeedDeck as alternative to Luli Reader
ThunderPhoenix added FeedDeck as alternative to Feed Fabrik- PredatorQ liked FeedDeck
- ver liked FeedDeck
endurra_ops added FeedDeck as alternative to News Coverage
bubudrc added FeedDeck as alternative to Newsreadeck
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What is FeedDeck?
FeedDeck is an open-source software that serves as an RSS and social media feed reader. It draws inspiration from TweetDeck, providing a unified platform where users can track their preferred feeds across all platforms. The software is developed using Flutter and integrates Supabase and Deno for its backend operations.
FeedDeck is designed for both mobile and desktop platforms, maintaining almost 100% code sharing for a consistent user experience. It allows users to monitor their favorite RSS and social media feeds, ensuring they stay updated with the latest news from Google News and their chosen RSS feeds. FeedDeck also allows users to stay connected with their friends and trending topics on various social media platforms like Medium, Nitter, Reddit, Tumblr, and X. In addition, it integrates with GitHub, enabling users to receive notifications and monitor activities in their repositories. For podcast enthusiasts, FeedDeck includes a built-in podcast player for following and listening to favorite podcasts. Lastly, it supports YouTube channel monitoring, allowing users to track and view their preferred YouTube channels.











Comments and Reviews
It is free limited: "Up to 10 sources"
Too many things do not work, from password autofill on the website to adding a simple RSS feed in the app. It's promising, but very very immature.
expensive, tracking
Screenshots look incredible, and they provide an ARM version for the RasPi.
However, you can't use the Windows app without logging in to an Apple, Google, Feeddeck, or local Supabase account.
And while it's possible to self-host, setting up Supabase and then building the web client looks like a major undertaking.