Feedly

This is probably the number one alternative right now. After the initial announcement that Google Reader was shutting down, the company reported that 500,000 users switched to Feedly only 48 later. It now works with any web browser – including IE – by pointing it to cloud.feedly.com. There’s also a Feedly app for iOS and Android so you get your feeds on the go. You can create an elegant “magazine-style” layout (similar to Flipboard) and switching all of your current feeds is seamless.

Use Outlook or Thunderbird Email Clients

If you live in Microsoft Outlook all day at work, you might as well use it as your RSS reader too. It’s easy to import your feeds and use Outlook as your desktop reader. Or if you’re a fan of Thunderbird, you can add your RSS feeds to it too.

Google Reader Replacements for Windows

Microsoft updated the News app in Windows 8 and RT a few months ago and it can be configured to get your RSS feeds. If you prefer a a free Open Source solution, check out RSSOwl. If you’re on Windows 7 and use Desktop Gadgets, one of the built-in defaults is for Feed Headlines.

Other Options

There’s also plenty of other RSS reader services and apps out there and which one you use ultimately comes down to your preferences and the device you’re using. Other notable contenders are NewsBlur, The Old Reader beta, or NetVibes. While not free Reeder is a popular RSS app for your iPhone or iPad. If you’re on a Mac, you can merge and read your RSS feeds in OS X Mail.

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