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They could have much more deftly spun Reader into Google+, for that matter, instead of suddenly treating it as the red-headed stepchild. It seems an obvious target for ad monetization (although there are some challenges with running ads on content you don't own see also Google News). I still don't get why Reader is in the "failure" column though. It sucks when you like a product that's being killed.
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Web services don't just run themselves for free forever. Innovative companies try out new product ideas. Google cancelling products is a good thing, by the way, and I say that as a former Google employee who had about half his projects cancelled. Somedays it feels like Google has reached the point where they've cancelled more projects than they started
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Jesus, I have no idea how to integrate my university library databases to anything else. I am looking forward to finding an alternative so the long migration can happen. Seriously, you want to kill calendar too? This throws my reading workflows in a tizzy from all of the proprietary databases and journals that I track.
![synching rssowl synching rssowl](https://perfectgeeks.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/06/rssowl-125-lv2-10.jpg)
This move also negates a lot of my iOS apps that used g-reader as the back-end *sigh* In all honesty, this is removing a vital thing that I use and keeps me tethered to Google. I just assumed that g-readers, as an aggregate, provided good filtering data and heck, also a set of eyeballs for ads so this killing of g-reader catches me totally by surprise. Afterall, no one puts content farms in their feeds and goes back to them even if you did so. You know, I thought that the Google Reader subscriptions and reads would have been used as one of the data points in helping with page ranking. In the meantime consumers moved on to Twitter, and Facebook, and a lonely few even use Google+. The frustrating part is that no one at Google could figure out how to make an RSS reader make sense for them as a business. I wish they'd given more than three months notice, but there it is, and this move is not entirely surprising. They have no moral obligation to provide free services to non-paying customers.
![synching rssowl synching rssowl](https://www.fileeagle.com/data/2020/04/Screenshot_2_SyncToy-750x625.png)
It'd be relatively straightforward for the Reeder author to slide over to another provider if he's inclined.Īnd to all you folks saying Google is Evil for shutting this product down. I'm partial to the Reeder apps myself and all they used Google Reader for was storing state my list of subscriptions and what I'd already read. Maybe with it removed someone else will pick up the idea and go with it. Google Reader was the free 900 lb gorilla, very hard to compete with.
![synching rssowl synching rssowl](https://www.tripwiremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/03/rss-owl.jpg)
I have some small hope that this change could reinvigorate the RSS reader market.
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