I have tried a few different ones. I like great news the best.
http://www.curiostudio.com/ It's free and can handle tons of feeds without maxing out the PC -Randy Johnson Aaron Roberson wrote: > After a conversation I had with Sean Corfield the other day and being > asked me, "Don't you read my blog?" and I had to admit that I hadn't > in a long while, I starting thinking about how much I am missing by > not having a good system in place for reading RSS feeds. > > I have tried using the built in readers in FF and IE7, but they don't > really cater to my madness (mainly because I have to manually check > the live bookmarks for new feeds). I also tried some online readers > but I have to log in and manually check the feeds. The closest thing > to working for me was the RSS reader built into Thunderbird, but it > cluttered my folder pain (I have too many folders cluttering it as it > is). > > I guess I'm looking for a desktop client dedicated to RSS feeds that > will behave like Thunderbird but would play a sound in Windows and in > Mac animate the icon (and play a sound, optionally) when a feed is > updated. In order to be effective for my lack of aggressiveness, it > would be nice if the client started on boot. > > What do you use that works for you? > > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~| ColdFusion MX7 by AdobeĀ® Dyncamically transform webcontent into Adobe PDF with new ColdFusion MX7. Free Trial. http://www.adobe.com/products/coldfusion?sdid=RVJV Archive: http://www.houseoffusion.com/groups/CF-Talk/message.cfm/messageid:279173 Subscription: http://www.houseoffusion.com/groups/CF-Talk/subscribe.cfm Unsubscribe: http://www.houseoffusion.com/cf_lists/unsubscribe.cfm?user=89.70.4