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Fewfeed V2 May 2026

Most readers force you to choose: strict chronological (chaos) or AI-prioritized (you miss things). FewFeed V2 introduces a "Hybrid" timeline. It shows you your "Critical Feeds" (e.g., your boss’s blog, your main client) in real-time, interleaved with AI-summarized clusters of lower-priority feeds. This means I never miss a server outage alert, but I can also scan 200 marketing blog posts in 30 seconds. No other aggregator does this without feeling janky.

I imported an OPML file with 200 feeds from Inoreader. FewFeed V2 choked. It duplicated 30 feeds, marked 15 as "invalid" (they worked fine elsewhere), and stripped all my folder hierarchies. Their support admitted this is a "known issue with nested tags." For a tool marketed as a "migration destination," this is embarrassing. I had to rebuild my 450-source list manually over a weekend. Not fun. fewfeed v2

V1’s mobile app was a web wrapper that drained battery. V2’s native app is lightning fast. Offline mode actually works—I downloaded 1,500 articles before a flight, and the read-later sync was flawless upon reconnection. The gesture controls (swipe left to summarize, right to archive) are intuitive. It’s replaced my morning Twitter scroll entirely. Most readers force you to choose: strict chronological

Most readers force you to choose: strict chronological (chaos) or AI-prioritized (you miss things). FewFeed V2 introduces a "Hybrid" timeline. It shows you your "Critical Feeds" (e.g., your boss’s blog, your main client) in real-time, interleaved with AI-summarized clusters of lower-priority feeds. This means I never miss a server outage alert, but I can also scan 200 marketing blog posts in 30 seconds. No other aggregator does this without feeling janky.

I imported an OPML file with 200 feeds from Inoreader. FewFeed V2 choked. It duplicated 30 feeds, marked 15 as "invalid" (they worked fine elsewhere), and stripped all my folder hierarchies. Their support admitted this is a "known issue with nested tags." For a tool marketed as a "migration destination," this is embarrassing. I had to rebuild my 450-source list manually over a weekend. Not fun.

V1’s mobile app was a web wrapper that drained battery. V2’s native app is lightning fast. Offline mode actually works—I downloaded 1,500 articles before a flight, and the read-later sync was flawless upon reconnection. The gesture controls (swipe left to summarize, right to archive) are intuitive. It’s replaced my morning Twitter scroll entirely.