David777
Well-known Member
- Location
- Silicon Valley
What are aggregate news sources?
A news aggregator (sometimes known as an RSS feed) gathers the latest news stories from various sources, creating a personalized news feed in one location. Which ones do you use or have used?

Top 50 biggest news websites in the world: December sees traffic slumps at ten biggest for second month in a row
I used to mostly go to Google news but dislike their current format that does not provide a summary list of all news categories and rather one must open tabs. Their Top Stories tab is dominantly just political, especially presidential politics I avoid. Also they seem to try and adjust displayed stories depending on Google Searches that shows up as obvious ads and types of stories even after opting out of personalized pages. Reuters, MSN, and Associated Press News are nicely balanced. Prefer sites allowing Comments. There are smaller sites I use for a narrower focus like livescience.com or local news aggregators like sfgate.com.
Many of these sites have hired webmasters that seem to think they need to always change their format, even when such is already popular and users are content with using a site instead of having to relearn whatever. And one way they do that is by adding more imagery with each news article link greatly taking up space instead of just having text listings I much prefer unless a feature is say a video. Same issue with say Windows OS upgrades that clueless financial bean counters on their financial board apparently approve of.
I won't use a subscription site like nytimes. For the sake of balance on both sides of issues, don't care if a site is somewhat politically biased as can recognize bias when I see it.
A news aggregator (sometimes known as an RSS feed) gathers the latest news stories from various sources, creating a personalized news feed in one location. Which ones do you use or have used?

Top 50 biggest news websites in the world: December sees traffic slumps at ten biggest for second month in a row
I used to mostly go to Google news but dislike their current format that does not provide a summary list of all news categories and rather one must open tabs. Their Top Stories tab is dominantly just political, especially presidential politics I avoid. Also they seem to try and adjust displayed stories depending on Google Searches that shows up as obvious ads and types of stories even after opting out of personalized pages. Reuters, MSN, and Associated Press News are nicely balanced. Prefer sites allowing Comments. There are smaller sites I use for a narrower focus like livescience.com or local news aggregators like sfgate.com.
Many of these sites have hired webmasters that seem to think they need to always change their format, even when such is already popular and users are content with using a site instead of having to relearn whatever. And one way they do that is by adding more imagery with each news article link greatly taking up space instead of just having text listings I much prefer unless a feature is say a video. Same issue with say Windows OS upgrades that clueless financial bean counters on their financial board apparently approve of.
I won't use a subscription site like nytimes. For the sake of balance on both sides of issues, don't care if a site is somewhat politically biased as can recognize bias when I see it.
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