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oDot 4 days ago

This is especially timely, as I'm currently building a service that let's you receive your RSS feed as a physical newspaper.

Many times this sort of meta information reveals much more than expected

benoliver999 4 days ago | parent | next [-]

Many moons ago I tried out a service [0] that did this with pocket articles (although I used to send to pocket vis RSS). It was pretty good! It didn't last long though.

I suspect maybe it's easier now to nail the layout if ai can read content before it goes to print.

[0] https://www.bfoliver.com/2014/paperlater

oDot 4 days ago | parent [-]

Thanks for the heads up about paperlater!

AI is indeed a crucial part in solving the two most difficult challenges -- typesetting and curation, although we'll probably do things that don't scale for a little while before fully automating.

NiloCK 4 days ago | parent | prev | next [-]

I sort of love this, but immediately wonder about curation.

My feeds are pretty unpredictable - sometimes I have 40 new articles in a day, sometimes just a few. The cheapness of digital consumption and interface makes it viable for me to skim titles and read, defer, or dismiss at my judgement. I don't want the entire feed printed out - not viable.

But if some SaaS is curating my feeds for me, I fear it'll turn into another algorithmized something optimizing for what exactly? At least the first-pass filter is explicitly set by me - feeds I subscribe to.

Curious to hear your thoughts on it, and wishing you luck.

kevstev 4 days ago | parent | next [-]

Yeah- I get about 300 new items each day in my feed... of which on average about 1% of those are worth reading the full article. There is a lot of duplication as well- many sites will cover a new gadget announcement, but only need to read one to get the full scoop. Printing this would be overwhelming- and many of those sites are summaries of "source documents" (papers, release notes, etc) that I want to jump to.

I am sure people use RSS in many different ways though, it just doesn't seem useful to me.

oDot 4 days ago | parent | prev | next [-]

You got it exactly right, curation and typesetting are the most challenging aspects of it. Experimenting with different solutions...

kelvinjps10 4 days ago | parent | prev [-]

Maybe you first get the summary on your phone and you decide what to be printed?

rafterydj 4 days ago | parent | prev | next [-]

I've had this same idea! Of course, it remains an idea never taken out of the garage. Are you delivering broadsheet, or formatting a printable file for users to print at home?

aa-jv 4 days ago | parent | next [-]

I have had this idea pitched to me many times over the years, with requests to build a simple prototype practically forced into my dev queue .. but I always resist it.

The last time someone tried to convince me this was a good idea was just after the iPhone was announced, and before everyone and their monkey had a super computer in their pocket. It seemed like a good idea at the time, so we almost started - but my advice to the punter then was "lets see what the mobile phone industry looks like next year" .. well that put a pin in it.

Nowadays, I'm not so sure I'd be so willing to do this - again, because it requires the user do the printing - but if you were to, say, make this into a vending machine product, which users can walk up to in the street and walk away with a custom 'zine full of their own interests, you might be onto something.

Here in Europe we have a lot of old telephone booths converted into mini neighborhood free libraries. I've often wondered whether it would make sense to put a public printer in those libraries and let people print things .. seems like this would be a revolutionary new product to make, with printable broadsheets based on a custom RSS, an obvious killer app .. assuming someone can be found to maintain the printers.

(Off to find thermal paper for my ClockworkPi, which I always wanted to turn into a custom RSS printer in the toilet...)

oDot 4 days ago | parent | prev [-]

Typesetting is a challenge so broadsheet vs tabloid is undetermined, but whatever it will be it will be delivered to the door. The newspaper paper is a crucial part, I believe.

newsclues 4 days ago | parent | prev | next [-]

I’ve thought of this (worked in book sales so the espresso printers were around for print on demand books.

Recently I’ve been living in a cottage town and thought of this idea again… rather than be reading on phones or tablets people could read printed books with their favourite articles or blogs. But I think the actual distribution system would be the killer, unless it’s at a big resort the transportation will kill the idea.

jesuslop 4 days ago | parent | prev | next [-]

That's a damn good of an idea. I'd had uses for my old parents for something that came by snail mail, to notify sports events or what not.

oceanhaiyang 4 days ago | parent [-]

There are already some similar projects that use a thermal printer to achieve this.

CubsFan1060 4 days ago | parent | prev | next [-]

This sounds interesting. Do you have anything to show yet?

oDot 4 days ago | parent [-]

Not yet, but we'll need beta testers. If you're interested and in a large metro area please reach out to ofek [at] nestful [dot] app mentioning said metro.

zahlman 4 days ago | parent | prev [-]

Even being aware that such a thing as "RSS" exists nowadays, implies a pretty high level of technical sophistication. Why would such users go out of their way to use up print stock, wait for it to be delivered, incur the energy/fuel costs of such delivery, etc. instead of reading it on their screen?