I've given you plenty of reasons to sign up for an RSS reader, but in case you need one more here it goes: Google Reader has released a new version with a more comprehensive friend feature that allows you to keep a close watch on your friends' activity. Wondering how much Internet ground your pals cover? Now you can check the stats to find out.
Sure, following Tweets secretly through your RSS allows a special, stalkerish pleasure, but watching your friend's Internet activity doesn't have to be all about surreptitiousness. When a pal shares a link to her Flickr account or I run across a photographer whose work I find inspiring I stick it in my RSS reader so I can keep up with their activity.
Flickr offers an RSS feed for photostream pages, which you select and add to your reader.
If you want to spruce up your BlackBerry's interface — and by spruce up I mean beautify it with one click access to things like news, weather, and travel info — Viigo is a new free app that you won't be able to live without.
Unlike other phones (ahem, the iPhone), the BlackBerry doesn't provide instant access to things like Twitter and your favorite blogs, track packages, and see weather forecasts, but with Viigo, you can have a full RSS reader on your phone that offers many tools and features — including all of these!
And once you become a registered user, you can specify your interests to receive customized alerts and updates.
Do you want to follow someone's updates on Twitter, but don't necessarily want them to see that you're following them? Or maybe you're reluctant to join Twitter, but still would like to see what someone is tweeting. You can actually add someone's Twitter feed to your RSS reader.
You no longer read newspapers for the daily headlines, but you are subscribed to about 100 different newsfeeds in Google Reader. Sound familiar? If you like the idea of reading your RSS news in magazine/newspaper format, there's a new site called Tabbloid that will whip up your feed in a PDF doc that you can easily print up and take with you on the go.
Change can be hard. Maybe, for instance, you committed to an RSS Reader early on and then decided to switch to a different RSS Reader later on. I'm not here to judge — just to guide.
I would be completely lost without my dear RSS reader. It's the second window I open every morning (after geeksugar, of course!) and it is solely responsible for keeping me in the know, on track, and organized.
This question goes out to the impressive 50 percent of geeksugar readers who use RSS readers — how many feeds do you follow?