There you'll see a list of current and their next billing date or expiration date. You can also refine these settings for each feed by selecting the feed, pressing Command-I, then making changes to the Persistence section of the Info window. For iPhones and iPads, go to Settings > Apple ID (where your name is at the top) > Subscriptions. Note that the program's General preferences do allow you to choose between keeping stories until they disappear from the feed, or for a fixed period of time (you can set that to one day).
I have both folders containing multiple feeds (such as all my Mac feeds together) and other folders containing single feeds.īut it's not that NetNewsWire stores the old news, it's the feed itself that presents the old stories for a certain period of time. If you’re already running a 6.0 test build, you can check for updates (be sure your prefs are set for test builds). It’s still a test build, though, and you should use your best judgment as to whether or not to run it. Allow app downloads to use cellular data: Below Cellular Data, turn on Automatic Downloads. This is the first beta release of NetNewsWire 6 We believe the app is freakishly stable, and we’ve fixed a bunch of bugs since the earliest test builds. Once you have your news reader up and running, subscribing to RSS feeds is.
#NETNEWSWIRE LOST SUBSCRIPTIONS UPDATE#
Automatically update apps: Turn on App Updates. NetNewsWire (Mac OS X) The lite version of this aggregator for the Mac is. [ kirkmc adds: I've been doing this for some time. Go to Settings > App Store, then do any of the following: Automatically download apps purchased on your other Apple devices: Below Automatic Downloads, turn on Apps.
#NETNEWSWIRE LOST SUBSCRIPTIONS ARCHIVE#
If you just want to see the unread items, click the folder if you need to find an older article, the full archive of that feed is right inside. NetNewsWire can nest folders several levels deep, so you can still use your existing folder structure. If the developer fixes this problem in version 3.0, then this workaround won't be necessary, but until then, here's a way to hide old news: simply put each feed in its own folder.
It gets pretty annoying slogging through a year's worth of news (if you're saving it) to find that one unread item. If you're anything like me, you love NetNewsWire, the RSS reader, but hate the fact that you can't hide all the items you've already read.