Reprinted from TidBITS by permission; reuse governed by Creative Commons license BY-NC-ND 3.0. TidBITS has offered years of thoughtful commentary on Apple and Internet topics. For free email subscriptions and access to the entire TidBITS archive, visit http://www.tidbits.com/ Comparing Blogtrottr, Feedrabbit, and Follow.it for Receiving RSS Feeds in Email Adam Engst I refuse to read news on the likes of Facebook and X/Twitter because of their manipulative algorithms (and as a protest against the many other societal ills they cause). Instead, I prefer to receive news via email, where I can read on my terms, which includes blocking trackers. Along with traditional mailing lists and email-focused services like Substack, most professional publications have email newsletters focusing on specific topics, and I subscribe to a handful that interest me. Although I long avoided headline news entirely on the principle that anything sufficiently important would filter into my life in other ways, I recently signed up for [1]1440, a daily email newsletter that distills stories with the most impact from over 100 sources. While it covers topics I don't care about at all, it's a quick enough scan that I've kept my subscription. However, the real win in centralizing newsreading in email has come from RSS-to-email services. I've tried numerous RSS readers over the years but have never settled down with one because they require me to devote specific time to reading news. That requires remembering to do so and switching context. I actively want to see what's new in my email every morning and throughout the day, but I never even think to launch an RSS reader. I have the same issue with Apple News, which languishes on my Mac and iPhone for weeks or months between launches. By employing an RSS-to-email service, new posts from blogs and other sites that provide RSS feeds can appear in my email automatically. Which one to use? I've been testing three: [2]Blogtrottr, [3]Feedrabbit, and [4]Follow.it. Although the interfaces vary a bit, the basics are similar'enter a feed URL, configure a few options, and then sit back and receive an email for each new post. Each of these services offers a free account with paid upgrades that remove limits and provide additional features. Here's how they compare. Ease of Setup Blogtrottr and Feedrabbit are straightforward and easy to use, although Feedrabbit's interface is tighter, cleaner, and more attractive. Follow.it is the most convoluted because it's a broader service designed to take information from multiple publications and package it up for you in various ways. Follow.it starts with a directory of publications from which you can receive articles, or you can paste in the URL of an RSS feed. Where Blogtrotter and Feedrabbit limit themselves to email delivery, Follow.it also lets you add articles to a news page, create another RSS feed, get articles as Telegram messages or tweets, and even receive notifications in your Web browser via a Chrome extension. For people like me who want to have a handful of RSS feeds delivered by email, Blogtrotter and Feedrabbit are both fine. Follow.it has additional options, but they're overkill for most people. Email Niceties All three services do an acceptable job of packaging RSS feeds into email messages. However, there are three areas where differences appear: Subject lines, dealing with large images, and the experience of summary-only feeds. Subject Lines Blogtrottr and Feedrabbit both incorporate the source feed's name and the post title in the email metadata by default. Feedrabbit gets the nod because it changes the Sender to '[Blog name] via Feedrabbit,' whereas Blogtrottr always appears as the Sender of all its messages, regardless of which RSS feed post it's forwarding. Blogtrottr also lets you customize the Subject lines further in its settings. In this regard, Follow.it is the least capable, identifying itself as the Sender and putting only the feed name plus 'new message' in the Subject line. Image Appearance At his blog, [5]The Eclectic Light Company, Howard Oakley writes smart things about Macs and Mac software, but he has also been conducting what is essentially a history of art class for years. His art posts collect and describe paintings on some theme, a particular artist, a time period, a location, or an object. Since my knowledge of art before this was minimal, I've thoroughly enjoyed learning more through Howard's posts, and he always illustrates what he's saying with a public-domain copy of the painting. Blogtrotter (below left) handles such images perfectly, but neither Follow.it (below center) nor Feedrabbit (below right) can deal with the large images from his blog posts. They don't scale the images to fit within the window size, making them impossible to read in email. They're even worse in the Gmail app I use on the iPhone. Summary-Only Feeds Finally, some RSS feeds, like the wonderful [6]Explain xkcd, provide only summaries and links to read the full article on the Web. Until recently, all three RSS-to-email services worked the same here, simply giving you a link to click to load the full article in your Web browser. Blogtrottr and Feedrabbit pass that link on via email for direct access, but Follow.it recently changed its free plan to add an interstitial page that displays a 5-second countdown before revealing the Go To Article link. An ad appears under Sponsored unless your ad blocker hides it, as uBlock Origin does for me in Arc. I'm not offended by Follow.it wanting to display an ad to users of its free plan, but I find the 5-second countdown irritating. What You Get for Subscribing So what are the limitations of the free plans, what do you get for paying, and how much does each service cost? * Blogtrottr: With Blogtrottr, users on the free plan see an ad at the top and bottom of each message. They're pretty big too'you won't miss them. To get rid of the ads, you can upgrade to a [7]paid plan. Pay $18.99 per year to eliminate the ads, or bump up to the Lite ($46.99) or Full ($82.99) plans for additional capabilities. Those two plans also give you customizable email templates, feed titles, and sender names, along with support for PDF or text attachments, control over digest sort order, and title-only notifications. The only difference between the Lite and Full tiers is that Lite is limited to 250 subscriptions, whereas Full allows an unlimited number. Frankly, I can't even imagine the firehose of content that would result from 250 subscriptions, but perhaps some businesses need to keep track of an entire industry of RSS feeds but still want to do it via email. An RSS newsreader would seem to be a better tool for that job. * Feedrabbit: Unlike the other two, Feedrabbit doesn't attempt to monetize its free plan with ads, so its email messages are blissfully free of distracting advertising. It prefers to attract users to a [8]paid plan with the carrot (sorry) of reduced limits and additional features. The Basic plan is limited to 10 subscriptions and 20 emails per day, retrieved on a 3-hour schedule and sent to a single address. The $25-per-year Premium plan allows up to 100 subscriptions that generate up to 200 emails per day, retrieved on a 1-hour schedule, and can deliver posts to multiple email addresses. (Basic plan users can still use + addressing, as in [9][email protected].) The Premium plan also offers inclusion and exclusion filtering. * Follow.it: As with everything else related to Follow.it, the [10]pricing is more complicated than the other two services. The Free plan lets you follow up to 20 feeds, use multiple output channels beyond email, filter posts, and share stories to social media. The four paid plans increase the number of feeds you can follow, provide higher numbers of daily AI summaries scaled to each tier, receive messages faster, and obtain customer support. Ads disappear at the $10-per-month Basic plan. For those getting started with an RSS-to-email service, I recommend trying [11]Feedrabbit first. Its interface is the easiest to use, and it provides the best presentation in your email app. You can get a feel for it using its Basic plan for free, and if you discover that you want more than 10 feeds, follow particularly chatty feeds, or want filters, $25 per year is an entirely reasonable price. [12]Blogtrottr isn't quite as easy to set up and use and offers different tradeoffs. Its free plan has no limits on the number of subscriptions, supports filters, and formats messages that contain large images the best, but you have to put up with ads in each message. Getting rid of the ads costs less than in Feedrabbit, with Blogtrott charging $18.99 per year. You won't go wrong with either of those two. In contrast, I can't recommend [13]Follow.it because it has the worst presentation in email, both in message lists and in formatting messages with large images, is overly complicated to set up if all you want to do is follow RSS feeds, and has annoying ads in its Free plan. Its paid plans are radically more expensive than the other two services at $60, $120, $240, and $480 per year. Follow.it makes sense only for a dedicated news junkie or a business trying to aggregate and reshare content in some way. References Visible links 1. https://join1440.com/ 2. https://blogtrottr.com/ 3. https://www.reddit.com/r/rss/comments/pvvl3t/service_similar_to_feedrabbitblogtrottr_that/ 4. https://follow.it/directory?language=en_EN&view=feed-messages 5. https://eclecticlight.co/ 6. https://www.explainxkcd.com/wiki/index.php/Main_Page 7. https://blogtrottr.com/pricing/ 8. https://feedrabbit.com/pricing 9. file://localhost/cdn-cgi/l/email-protection 10. https://follow.it/readers/features-and-pricing 11. https://feedrabbit.com/ 12. https://blogtrottr.com/ 13. http://follow.it/ Hidden links: 14. https://tidbits.com/wp/../uploads/2024/08/RSS-to-Email-UI-comparison.png 15. https://tidbits.com/wp/../uploads/2024/08/RSS-to-Email-Subject-lines.png 16. https://tidbits.com/wp/../uploads/2024/08/RSS-to-Email-image-formatting-comparison-scaled.jpg 17. https://tidbits.com/wp/../uploads/2024/08/RSS-to-Email-FollowIt-ad.png 18. https://tidbits.com/wp/../uploads/2024/08/RSS-to-Email-Blogtrottr-plans.png 19. https://tidbits.com/wp/../uploads/2024/08/RSS-to-Email-Feedrabbit-plans.png 20. https://tidbits.com/wp/../uploads/2024/08/RSS-to-Email-FollowIt.pricing.png .