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SharpReader vs. Sauce Reader

A while back I mentioned that I had been looking for and found an RSS aggregator (newsreader):

For about a week now I’ve been hunting for a good RSS aggregator. I really didn’t want a web based RSS aggregator because they are usually a pain to manage. I looked hard and heavy and found SharpReader. It’s phenomenal. The power it packs and features it has are incredible.

I’m not so impressed with SharpReader anymore. A few days ago I went out and nabbed Sauce Reader to see if it would be a better RSS newsreader.

There are two things I’m not too impressed with about these two products and that is their use of Internet Explorer. Something I’ve loathed for quite some time now is Internet Explorer. Both SharpReader and Sauce Reader come out of the box using IE for your web page viewing needs. In SharpReader you can change the default browser to FireFox but I always get errors when using FireFox as the default browser. In Sauce Reader I have yet to find an option that allows me to change the default browser.

I understand that there are some programming limitations in the Microsoft environment that force this semi-mandatory use of Internet Explorer to happen but as soon as a Microsoft independent RSS aggregator hits the scene it’s going to flourish. But other than that, both newsreaders are decent products.

SharpReader is a lightweight, fast RSS aggregator that is easy to manage and configure. It calmly notifies you of new information as it comes in and does its job very well. Some of the features of SharpReader are:

- Dialog-less way of subscribing to new feeds - just drag a link from your browser into SharpReader, or enter the url into the address-bar at the top.- Feedster integration to easily search weblogs and newssites for specific terms, and even subscribe to such a search to be notified of new results.

- Reduces bandwidth by using HTTP Conditional GETs and gzip/deflate encoding.

- HTTP Authentication support.

SharpReader is definitely a pre-release product but should develop into a fine RSS aggregator.

Sauce Reader is a robust product that offers more than just RSS reading capabilities (that I’ll never use). It’s powerful enough to do everything you could possibly want to do with a newsreader. However, there is one thing I’ve noticed about Sauce Reader that is a major turnoff. Sauce Reader uses an inordinate amount of system resources. I have observed 60+ megabytes of RAM being dedicated to just Sauce Reader. This alone, in my opinion, gives SharpReader the edge. But, similar to SharpReader, Sauce Reader is a beta product (just ignore the 1.8 version number). Some of the defining features of Sauce Reader are:

- Clean, intuitive Outlook 2003 style user interface.- Integrated weblogging environment with full posting functionality.

- Automatic application updates.

- MSN Messenger integration.

Like I mentioned before, Sauce Reader has a lot of features that I will never use. However, some of these features could be very beneficial to some one that reports in their blog on what other blogs or news sources are saying.

So overall, SharpReader is a better RSS aggregator than Sauce Reader because SharpReader is a newsreader and nothing else where Sauce Reader is a newsreader as well as a few other things. However, neither product completely satisfies my RSS aggregation needs. Both have their advantages (lightweight vs. all-in-one) but the defining disadvantage to Sauce Reader is its system resource utilization.

If anyone has any better RSS aggregators that they know about please don’t hesitate to let me know.

9 Comments

SharpReader vs. Sauce Reader

A while back I mentioned that I had been looking for and found an RSS aggregator (newsreader): “For about a week now I’ve been hunting for a good RSS aggregator. I really didn’t want a web based RSS aggregator because they are usually a pain to manage….

Sauce Reader always uses IE for it’s own internal browser window. BTW, by default it will strip out unsafe HTML from feed items.

If you set another browser as your default then Sauce Reader will automatically open all new browser windows using that default.

Sauce Reader v1.9 will be out in the next day or two and improves the memory management dramatically.

Thanks for the feedback, it really helps :)

cheers, Nathan

“Unsafe HTML” is it defined anywhere what exactly is Unsafe HTML? I’m glad you’re trying to fix the memory issues, I look forward to testing your product more in the future.

If you’re looking for a good RSS aggregator you should try RSS Bandit ( www.rssbandit.org ). I’ve used both of the pieces you reviewed… Bandit is the best. Also, they are apparently looking at merging the firefox platform as a default internal and external browser if it is present on the clients system. This is scheduled for future releases.

Have you tried Awasu? It’s a pretty cool agggregator designed for the power user. Lots of scripting hooks to do custom actions, reporting, stuff like that.

I too have tried Awasu but have moved onto RssReader. Great small standalone. It does use IE internally but can set up to open links externally in your browser of choice.

Sauce Reader 1.9 Beta Released

Nathan of Synop kept his word when he commented on my SharpReader vs. Sauce Reader review: Sauce Reader v1.9 will be out in the next day or two and improves the memory management dramatically. Last night I was notified by…

I completely hate the way that some require .NET Framework. I wish someone could build a great client that does not require the framework.

I have used the RSS features in Thunderbird, but it started to download duplicate copies of feeds and that just got annoying.

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