Now I use Feedly, which has become an even better service due to it's customer service and actually listening to its users. Feedly is free and easy to use. I've organized all my feeds into categories for all my favorite sites, including apps, books, comics, friend's blogs, YouTube channels, Facebook pages, forum threads, and more!
From my Kindle Fire I just went to the Web, typed in cloud. It's so easy, 'cause whether I access my RSS feeds from my computer, mobile, or friend's PC, it keeps track of which ones I've already read and those that I still need to check. This is the video I watched a couple of years ago that helped me understand and setup my first RSS feed.
When you're done, be sure to come back to see all the other great Kindle tricks and tips I've added and am continuing to add to the site!
I've added an article all about finding Free Kindle Fire Books which explains how to add Amazon's RSS feeds for their top free and paid books in your favorite genres! To be notified of new Kindle Fire news, deals, articles, exclusive content, and more subscribe to my Kindle Fire Email Alerts! I hate spam too and promise to only send you Kindle Fire Alerts. See Privacy Policy for details. Leave a Comment: I love receiving your comments, but please read the notes below before posting.
All comments are moderated. If you leave the page you won't see your comment until it is approved. Select the "Post to Facebook" check box to be notified on FB when a reply has been posted. With limited sources, I can focus more on the whole article instead of a lot titles. But as long as the content is available online, we can use tools to crawl and convert it to an RSS feed.
There is a tool called RSSHub does exactly this. I also contributed some code to it. So once we have the RSS sources ready, we need to import them. There were a lot of platforms to do that, but most of them are not reliable anymore. Luckily, we have an even better option now: Calibre. It turns the RSS sources into an e-book and send it to an Email address Most E-readers, including Kindle, allow you to transfer books by sending an Email.
It has many pre-defined sources but you can also add custom RSS sources. What you need to notice is add kindlefeeder. Step Two: Add feed sources to your account , KindleFeeder has provided some rss sources for you.
Free users can add up to 12 feeds in one account, if you think it's not enough, you can upgrade to premium user. Step Three: The next step is Delivery settings , you can choose the options to determine how to deliver the rss feeds, such as whether show images or not, and many other useful options.
Step Four: Kindlefeeder has options to schedule your News Feeds , but it only works with premium account. Unfortunately, Kindlefeeder is not offer new premium service subscriptions at this time. For free users, there is no way to get an automatic delivery.
So you need to manually push your content over to your kindle via the 'queue new delivery' button on the main page. Note: Kindle4rss is another website to help you send rss feeds to Kindle, it's almost the same of KindleFeeder, you can follow the steps above to accomplish the process.
Remember you must add Kindle4rss email to your amazon Kindle approved email list. IFTTT is a web service which let you set up connection between different applications. It's not complicated to use. All you have to do is find a recipe, set up the response, and then IFTTT will do the rest work for you.
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