Eric_WVGG 36 minutes ago

I ran an RSS aggregator ~15 years ago. All these things were still problems back then… also FeedBurner was a complete plague, at least that’s mostly gone away.

I’ve been trying to work out a new approach to newsreaders for a couple years now, and have all but given up on RSS. The standard needs to improve in significant ways — most notably with discoverability — if it ever wants to get back to the Google Reader “glory days”.

I’ve tried reporting bugs to rags like The New Yorker and The Atlantic, each one is a a black hole. Unless you can make a case for helping monetization, they don’t care at all, and I can’t say I blame them.

lapcat 4 hours ago

> There is also an option to put your website behind a CDN front, such as Cloudflare or Github Pages, and let the CDN provider deal with renewals.

The biggest cause of broken feeds for me is actually Cloudflare challenges on the feed URL.

alastairr 4 hours ago

I collect a lot of feeds, I see each of these a lot. It'd be great if there was a service to politely notify the site owner, as I'm sure many don't realize their feed is broken / incorrect / missing.

Avamander 4 hours ago

How do people discover new feeds? Are there any nice collections of blogs or are people just accumulating them over the years based on HN posts?

miladyincontrol 3 hours ago

> There is also an option to put your website behind a CDN front, such as Cloudflare or Github Pages, and let the CDN provider deal with renewals.

Or they could just use a modern webserver setup? Manually updating certs on webservers in 2025 is just a massive waste of time.

Also of the opinion many a personal site being dynamic is less than ideal. How many outdated php sites I've seen hijacked, ruined when their hosting service updates things behind their back, run into resource related issues, caching bodges that go wrong, etc. Meanwhile the site maybe gets updates like once a week.

At the very least the RSS feed certainly shouldnt need to be generated on every request unless theres good reason.

Well aware my complaints yelling at the void as many just want a prebuilt solution which 'just works', even if it requires a LAMP stack.

BoredPositron 4 hours ago

For me the biggest problem is sites that truncate their feeds. As an example the "the verge" feeds are basically useless now.

  • crtasm 4 hours ago

    Try a feed reader that can download the source article for you (similar to reader mode in web browsers)

  • LorenDB 4 hours ago

    I don't mind truncated feeds too much, as long as there is an explicit notice at the end that the full content is available on the website.

  • jerlam 2 hours ago

    The Verge is heavily paywalled now. They won't put their full articles in the feeds, since they want you to pay.