![]() I’m back to waiting on Google to integrate searching into their reader. Guess I should have read all the comments first. I’m hoping I’m missing something and the search is really there but a couple of commenter’s on Lifehacker pointed out the same thing. This is the first time I can recall that a Lifehacker post led me astray. This is no good.Īpparently the touted search feature does nothing but search the name of the feed you are subscribed to which makes it useless as far as I’m concerned. This time I search for Lifehacker and it brings back the Lifehacker feed. ![]() I run through the Lifehacker posts, yep, there’s the FastLadder post, and off to the search I go. ![]() OK, I figure maybe I need to have at least read the post on FastLadder for the search to work. I do a search for FastLadder and get nothing. Where is the search field? Ahh, right where you would expect it to be, above the list of feeds. The fact that I had to signup prior to even learning about the service was a bit offsetting but signup I did, which was quickly followed by uploading my OPML file. Alas there is no integrated search in Google Reader (silly, I know). Too many times when running through feeds in Google Reader I would like to search on something I know I read but can’t recall which feed. When you subscribe to the RSS feeds of the sites you read, the reader automatically pulls recently updated posts from those sites. I’m not sure yet how deep the search goes (i.e., I don’t know how many feed items Fastladder saves), but what’s there is really good. If you love to read information from a variety of websites and blogs online, you can customize and streamline your entire reading experience with an online RSS reader. What excited me about the Lifehacker post was the following,įastladder has integrated search! It’s really fast and easy to use. I just learned about a new feed reader called FastLadder on Lifehacker.
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