RSS Button for Safari 1.6 MAS
Discover and subscribe to RSS, Atom or JSON feeds in your preferred desktop or web based news reader from Safari.
RSS Button for Safari requires either a desktop news reader supporting RSS, Atom or JSON feeds or an account with an online news reader such as Feedbin, Feedly, FeedHQ, Inoreader, NewsBlur, The Old Reader, Minimal Reader or BazQuz Reader. Themes lab for keynote 5 1 3. Alternatively you can choose to copy the feed address to your clipboard or use any self-hosted news reader.
RSS Button for Safari requires either a desktop news reader supporting RSS, Atom or JSON feeds or an account with an online news reader such as Feedbin, Feedly, FeedHQ, Inoreader, NewsBlur, The Old Reader, Minimal Reader or BazQuz Reader. Themes lab for keynote 5 1 3. Alternatively you can choose to copy the feed address to your clipboard or use any self-hosted news reader.
To install:
- Open RSS Button for Safari from Applications;
- Choose your preferred news reader
- Enable the extension from Safari Preferences under the extensions tab
- If the toolbar button does not appear in Safari go to View / Customize Toolbar and drag the RSS Button to your toolbar.
- Replied on June 1, 2016 In reply to A. User's post on May 31, 2016 Thanks but this is not RSS feeds, I want specific feeds, for Example BBC & Al Jazeera.
- An RSS Reader (also known as an RSS aggregator or News Reader) is a software or a web-based application which enables you to get the latest news headlines, in RSS format, delivered straight to you. Some RSS Readers also allow you to set up watches or filters so you only see the news you want to see.
While The Old Reader is a web-only app, it integrates with popular native RSS apps like Reeder (free until Reeder 4 is launched) and FeedReader (Free; Linux). You can also build your own mobile app using The Old Reader's API.
Compatible news reader desktop applications include:
- Cappuccino
- Feedy
- Leaf
- Newsflow
- News Explorer
- News Menu
- NetNewsWire
- ReadKit
- Reeder 4.1.5+
- Stripes
Applications that are not compatible or have known issues opening feed URLs automatically:
- Pulp
- Mozilla Thunderbird
- NewsBar
- Reeder 3 or older
- RSS Reader
![Rss Rss](https://is2-ssl.mzstatic.com/image/thumb/Purple71/v4/f9/f4/cc/f9f4cc71-e92d-73ba-9542-d90f4c6132ea/pr_source.png/950x950bb.jpg)
What’s New:
Version 1.6
- Add feeder.co web service
- Add Feed Wrangler web service
- Fixed potential issue populating list of news readers when the saved news reader is uninstalled
- Add continuous polling on the active tab to detect changes to available RSS feeds for SPAs
- Add error message for unknown extension states
Languages: English
Compatibility: macOS 10.12 or later, 64-bit processor
Homepagehttps://apps.apple.com/us/app/rss-button-for-safari/id1437501942
Compatibility: macOS 10.12 or later, 64-bit processor
Homepagehttps://apps.apple.com/us/app/rss-button-for-safari/id1437501942
Screenshots
Stripes Rss News Reader 1 4 0
A HackRF One software-defined radio (SDR) will let you zap out and receive radio signals all across the spectrum. Add a PortaPack, and you can do that on the go — for diagnostic tests and white hat hacking only, of course. It’s a handy setup that you can use for all sorts of things, specifically radio things. But, Salvador Mendoza has come up with another interesting use for his PortaPack as a mag stripe reader and “replayer.”
The magnetic stripe on credit cards stores data as bits, but is read as an analog audio track like a short cassette tape. When the card is swiped, a magnetic head in the reader “listens” to the data to determine your credit card information. So, Mendoza’s first step was to grab a magnetic card reader. That outputs the magnetic stripe’s audio tracks, but Mendoza still needed a way to get it to his PortaPack for later use.
For that, he used a cheap off-the-shelf FM transmitter. That creates a radio station that the HackRF One can tune into to pick up and record the mag stripe tracks. If Mendoza were a bad person, he could just go around swiping people’s cards to collect recordings, but he obviously won’t do that. With a mag stripe recording on hand as a WAV file, he can then replay it with a simple magnetic coil connected to the HackRF One’s audio output jack. The coil just needs to be positioned near a credit card reader’s magnetic head, and Mendoza can “swipe” any credit card he has recorded.
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