With the new Shared Collections feature, you can make your stash of reading sources public on a special page.
CodeSpaces.com closed its doors this week, following a 12-hour security breach that completely wiped its servers.
From Starbucks Powermat wireless charging to Tesla's open patents, here's what you missed Thursday.
The RSS reader (and Evernote) were hit on Wednesday, and Feedly is now under attack again.
If you've been patiently waiting to get your hands on the premium version of Google Reader replacement Feedly, now is your chance.
Topping tech headlines Monday, tablet shipments are on the decline ahead of the next-gen iPad release, MSI introduced the "world's thinnest" 17-inch gaming laptop, and Amazon founder Jeff Bezos bought the Washington Post Company.
For $5 per month or $45 per year, users can upgrade to Feedly Pro, which initially comes with four new features: in-feed search, Evernote integration, premium support, and HTTPS.
A morning mix-up left Flipboard users confused and upset over missing Google Reader feeds, which the company promises are safe and sound.
Now in beta, Web users with an AOL, Facebook, Google, or Twitter account can request access to the AOL Reader system.
Feedly is gearing up for the impending death of Google Reader by launching Feedly cloud and a standalone Web version.
Just in time for the July 1 shutdown of Google Reader, news aggregator Digg will next week begin rolling out the first version of its own RSS reader.
Feedly revealed that it has quietly been working with third-party clients Reeder, Press, Nextgen Reader, Newsify, and gReader for integration.
After capitalizing on an influx of ex-Goggle Reader fans, Feedly is wasting no time in giving users mobile users new features.
Topping tech headlines Monday, Apple apologized to Chinese customers for warranty and repair policy confusion, Google's April Fools' jokes pranked users, and Playboy magazine is coming to the iPhone, sans nudity.
The mourning period for the still-active Google Reader has already passed for about 3 million people who recently migrated to Feedly.
Google Reader may be making its death march, but Feedly makes a fine substitute.