RSS readers are immensely helpful to also interact with image (such as web comics) and video (Youtube channels) feeds.
Alas, a terminal interface is a decisively bad choice for that.
kseistrup 10 hours ago [-]
Some terminal emulators – e.g., kitty – can show images inline. I use `toot` and `tooi` to read the Fediverse in kitty, and the images are there alright.
asdff 8 hours ago [-]
You don't need to stay completely in the terminal interface. I use newsboat. I have configured it such that if I want to open any media links like that, one keystroke opens them in a new firefox window on top of everything. One can also use something like mpv or imagemagick if firefox feels too "heavy."
rambambram 9 hours ago [-]
I wish more sites added images (in the <enclosure> tag preferably) to their RSS posts. I think images are the perfect middle ground between spicing up pure textbased posts and not being distracting videos on autoplay.
With my self-built reader (link in bio) I'm always delighted to see posts with photos or images attached.
the_gipsy 9 hours ago [-]
Plug: I made https://github.com/ratatui/ratatui-image for ratatui projects (like this one), and terminals that support some image protocol. It falls back to some ASCII-art.
analogpixel 9 hours ago [-]
I tried to use neomutt a few months ago, and found that all email is now just a mime encoded minefield. too bad, I liked the mutt workflow over having to have a browser opening and checking for stuff.
sneak 7 hours ago [-]
What if I don't like beans?
jwr 10 hours ago [-]
I used to read USENET news in text terminals on X11 systems, and on 3270 terminals before that. It's amusing how we're coming full circle.
asciii 8 hours ago [-]
text is king. The rise of LLMs helped reinforce that nicely IMO.
oDot 8 hours ago [-]
TUIs are so nice.
Please consider using Trolley to package this for non-technical users:
Alas, a terminal interface is a decisively bad choice for that.
With my self-built reader (link in bio) I'm always delighted to see posts with photos or images attached.
Please consider using Trolley to package this for non-technical users:
https://github.com/weedonandscott/trolley