

Along the top you'll have options to mark as favorite, mark as unread, share it or send to a read it later service, and view in Readability mode. Tapping on an article allows you to read it and tapping the title will take you to the full blown web version. Again, you can use the left hand navigation pane to drill down further and sort by individual feeds and most recent. To start reading you can tap into any section and you'll be presented with those articles in a list view. Upon launching Reeder for iPad you'll see a list of your feeds in the main viewing area and a small navigation pane off to the left that allows you to toggle between starred, unread, and all items.

Reeder was one of the first good RSS apps released in the App Store and it keeps getting better.
La times newsrack update#
When that new version is released, we'll update this shootout accordingly. Note: We didn't include NetNewsWire in this shootout because it's under new management and rumor has it a new version is on its way. Reeder, The Early Edition 2, and NewsRack are all great choices but which one is best? And which one is best for you?

We've already taken a look at the best personalized magazine apps for iPad, including Flipboard, Zite, and Pulse but for those of us who like a more traditional style of RSS, and more control over our news feeds, nothing beats a dedicated RSS app. The iPad provides one of the best digital reading experiences available, and a great RSS reading app only makes that experience better.
