Cost / License
- Free
- Open Source
Application types
Alerts
- Discontinued
Platforms
- Self-Hosted
Nextgen Reader is described as 'The fastest Feedly client for Windows and Windows Phone with powerful features' and is a RSS Reader in the news & books category. There are more than 100 alternatives to Nextgen Reader for a variety of platforms, including Web-based, Windows, Android, Mac and iPhone apps. The best Nextgen Reader alternative is Feedly, which is free. Other great apps like Nextgen Reader are Inoreader, Feeder RSS feed reader, RSS Guard and Feedbro.
A great alternative to Google Reader. Offers awesome productivity features like Search, RSS feeds for your starred items, tags & folder. You can share on X, .




RSS Menu is a systemwide menu that allows you to read and organize your favourite RSS or Atom feeds.




PaperOak is a free RSS aggregator to read the hottest news, blogs, articles, and feeds on the internet. With active news updates to our servers from the many RSS feeds every minute, there is never a shortage of interesting feeds to read.




Alligator is a mobile RSS feed reader for mobile Linux devices. It is part of the Plasma Mobile app collection.


Readefine Desktop is an AIR app which uses Flex, creating a really nice, clean layout for your RSS / Google Reader feeds, text or HTML content. Read content in a book like multi-column layout and tweak settings like justification, column width...


RSS Monster is an easy to use web-based RSS aggregator and reader compatible with the Fever API, created as an alternative for Google Reader.

Do you want to read your news using RSS & Atom feeds in the most efficient (compact grid), no-nonsense way, with no requirement to setup or use an existing service account? If you do, Heartfeed might be the app for you.



Sage-Like is a simple, sidebar based feed reader (Atom, RSS and RDF). Like its add-on predecessors, Sage by Peter Andrews and the Sage++ by Higmmer, it's lightweight and fast.



RSS Bandit is a standalone reader that has many attractive features, allowing a user to merge news headlines from multiple sources onto a single page, and organize articles based on keyword, read/unread status, and date.


Derived from the Icelandic word “Frettir”, which translates directly to the word “News”, Fretsi's main target is to make online reading easier than ever, enabling you to access news and keeping you up-to-date in the easiest and fastest way possible.
