NewsMac Pro 1.2.3 is awesome, NNW beware

As you might remember, NewsMac Pro 1.2 brought some nice enhancements when it landed last November. Even though this latest version is just a .0.3 update, I think this app is finally maturing into a serious reader, and I also hope the NetNewsWire people are paying attention to what Rory Prior is doing with this most excellent of newsreaders.
This latest version brings typical things like bug fixes and new features to the table, but I think a couple of the most important new options are a new view (now a total of 4) for arranging your feeds and headlines, as well as more keyboard support for moving between groups, feeds and headlines. While using the keyboard isn't nearly as smooth as it is in NetNewsWire, NewsMac Pro is getting there, and I hope more users submit requests to move this feature up Rory's priority list. Most serious folks I know who use RSS apps barely touch their mouse while they're in the app, and I think it would serve NewsMac Pro well to gain this ability ASAP.
A couple other big strengths NewsMac Pro has are flagging headlines with different colors based on user-defined keywords, as well as an iTunes-style built-in podcast player, so you can keep everything under one roof, if you so desire.
With all this great stuff coming to life in NewsMac Pro, it certainly isn't still without its shortcomings. The demo casts off a time limit in return for allowing a user to add only 10 feeds. I cannot stress enough how bad of an idea this is, as I would imagine anyone looking at an RSS app like this is going to have far, far more than 10 feeds in their OPML (which reminds me: NewsMac Pro fortunately supports OPMLs with groups). The other clunky thing is the way feed and group updating is defined. You can specify different update intervals (30 minutes, 1 hour, etc.) for each group of feeds, which is certainly nice for some uses, but I can't find a way to specify any kind of a default for the app as a whole.
All things considered, I think NewsMac Pro is a great newsreader that includes some very appealing innovations in the world of RSS reading and organzing. If you're in the market for a great way to keep track of all your favorite sites and blogs, head over and pick up a demo. If it really floats yer boat, a full license costs a mere $24.95.
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As you might remember, NewsMac Pro 1.2 brought some nice enhancements when it landed last November. Even though this latest version is just...
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NMP uses a huge amount of RAM and CPU when you have a decent amount of feeds. I have around 150, and it is a huge memory hog. That is probably one of the reasons why he limits the demo to 10 feeds, so you don't see how awful the performance is until you buy it. There are some nice ideas, I give them that, but back to NNW for me.
January 31 2006 at 5:39 AM Report abuse Permalink rate up rate down ReplyI don't see this app using FTP syncing anywhere, am I missing something? I need it to syn to multiple computers, without dotmac, and I don't care to use my ipod for that.
P.S. -- TUAW, fix your comment code so people can put url's in properly.
Anyone else having stability problems with this release of NMP?
January 29 2006 at 9:23 PM Report abuse Permalink rate up rate down ReplyAs long as other readers are being mentioned, I'll throw in a vote for my favorite, NewsFire. It has the cleanest interface of any reader I've seen so far, really *feels* like a Mac application, and it gets frequent updates incorporating new features and user requests. One-finger operation, groups, smart-groups, podcast support, all around a nice contender in the RSS ring.
January 29 2006 at 7:04 PM Report abuse Permalink rate up rate down ReplyVienna is a lot better. A very good software, open source, with rich preferences and options. Smart folders, spootlight integrated, opml import and export, integrated tabbed browser using safari web engine.
Really nice. Suggested to anyone.
(NNW in the free version is very poor if compared to vienna)
http://www.opencommunity.co.uk/vienna2.html
I'd also like to endorse Vienna. I've been using it for quite awhile. It's open-source, actively being worked on, and free. Can't beat that!
January 29 2006 at 5:27 PM Report abuse Permalink rate up rate down ReplyBut it has tags! Very nice. You can tag every feed with keywords, something I have wanted in NetNewsWire for a long time.
See: http://brilliantdays.com/archives/2006/01/macnews_pro_has_tags.php
Here's a fix for the link to Vienna (it wouldn't work for me):
http://www.opencommunity.co.uk/vienna2.html
I'll stick w/ bloglines
January 29 2006 at 2:32 PM Report abuse Permalink rate up rate down Replyi still prefer google reader
January 29 2006 at 2:16 PM Report abuse Permalink rate up rate down ReplyHot Apps on TUAW
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