Menu Bar RSS reader for macOS
A RSS & Atom feed reader that lives in the system status bar.
Very much inspired by RSS Menu; go ahead and check that out.
baRSS will automatically update feeds for you, and inform you when new content is available. The new articles are just a menu away.
baRSS is unobtrusive, fast, and built from scratch with minimal footprint in mind. The application uses less than 30 Mb memory and has a ridiculous file size of 1 Mb.
Speaking of reducing web traffic.
In contrast to other applications, baRSS does not save any cached web sessions or cookies as a matter of fact.
But it will reuse ETag
and Last-Modified
headers to avoid unnecessary transmissions.
Further, tuning the update frequently will decrease the traffic even more.
Requires macOS Sierra (10.12) or higher.
Go to releases and downloaded the latest version.
Searching for the App Store release? Read this notice.
You'll need Xcode, RSXML2 (required), and QLOPML (optional).
git clone https://github.com/relikd/baRSS
git clone https://github.com/relikd/RSXML2
git clone https://github.com/relikd/QLOPML
Alternatively, you can simply delete the QLOPML
project reference without much harm.
QLOPML
is a Quick Look plugin for .opml
files.
It will display the file contents whenever you hit spacebar.
That's it.
Open baRSS/baRSS.xcodeproj
and build the project.
Note, there are some compiler flags that append 'beta' to the development release.
If you prefer the optimized release version go to Product > Archive
.
baRSS has no option to launch it on start. However, you can still add the application to auto boot by adding it to the system login items:
System Preferences > User > Login Items
The following options have no UI equivalent and must be configured in Terminal.
Most likely, you will never stumble upon these if not reading this chapter.
Note: To reset an option run defaults delete de.relikd.baRSS {KEY}
, where {KEY}
is an option from below.
If you hold down the option key and click on an article item, you can mark a single item (un-)read without opening it.
When holding down the option key, the menu will show an item to open only a few unread items at a time. This number can be changed with the following Terminal command (default: 10):
defaults write de.relikd.baRSS openFewLinksLimit -int 10
defaults write de.relikd.baRSS shortArticleNamesLimit -int 50
defaults write de.relikd.baRSS articlesInMenuLimit -int 40
defaults write de.relikd.baRSS colorStatusIconTint -string "#37F"
defaults write de.relikd.baRSS colorUnreadIndicator -string "#FBA33A"
open barss:backup && cp "$HOME/Library/Containers/de.relikd.baRSS/Data/Library/Application Support/baRSS/backup/feeds_latest.opml" "$HOME/Desktop/baRSS_backup_$(date "+%Y-%m-%d").opml"
The following list is a collection of ideas that may be added if people request it.
If you find this app somewhere on the App Store, you can be sure that it is a counterfeit. As long as you can read this very notice, I am not responsible for the publication. Further, I can't guarantee the App Store version wasn't modified by a malicious actor to spy on you.
First, open source is awesome! Second, RSS Menu made some design decisions I didn't like. For example, the new integrated browser window.
One thing I liked most, was the fact that feeds were opened in the default browser. Not like 99% of the other feed readers on the market that show a separate HTML viewer window. No rendering issues, no broken links, no content that is different from the actual news article.
I know, the whole purpose of RSS is to deliver content without the need of opening a webpage. But for me RSS is more about being informed whenever a blog or news feed has updated content. E.g, subscribing to video channels without having to have an account.
Actually, I started this project with Swift. Even without adding much functionality, the app was exceeding the 10 Mb file size. The working alpha version, written in Objective-C, had only 500 Kb. The reason being that Swift frameworks are always packed into the final application.
Sadly, this was before Swift 5 and ABI stability. Had I only started the project a year later… But on the other hand, now it is macOS 10.12 compatible.
This project uses a modified version of Brent Simmons' RSXML for feed parsing. RSXML2 is licensed under a MIT license (same as this project).