

When you click on the extension icon, you are presented with a popup.

The user interface is very much inspired by mobile navigation styles, and the goal is to be swift and elegant to use. Of course you can configure less subtle ways, like sound notifications or popup notifications.įeeder allows the user to see their latest posts, folder hierarchy, or quickly navigate the unread and starred posts. It should be invisible when not needed, and subtly notify you when new content is available. One of the main goals is to be an intuitive way to access your feeds.

Obviously we’re a bit biased in writing about this, as we built it. The extension RSS Feed Reader by Feeder is an example of an RSS widget for Chrome. Their vision was to keep the core of Chrome minimal and fast, but allow extensions to solve the diverse problems their users have. So why can’t Chrome just display RSS feeds itself? Why do you need RSS feed readers for Chrome? Other competitor browsers have RSS readers built in, but Chrome decided from the beginning to not include this. Most extensions are free, some offer ads or paid upgrades. It is hosted, secured and curated by Google themselves. The Chrome Webstore is the place to find and download extensions. This is exactly the case with most of the RSS extensions built for Chrome. The most common case for extensions are that they appear as icons in the upper-right corner of the browser window. RSS feed readers for Chrome are a good example of that. An extension is built to solve a particular problem, or ease the user in their daily flows. Chrome extensions are small addons that you can install on Google Chrome or derivative browsers.
