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Flipboard: Your Social News Magazine - Apps - CNET Australia. Flipboard is your personal magazine. It is the most popular way to catch up on the news you care about, discover amazing things from around the world, or stay connected to the people closest to you. Now with Flipboard 2.0, you can save and collect the things you love into your own magazines like Trips I want to take or Dream Homes.When you first launch Flipboard simply pick a few topics to start reading everything from world news to sports, travel and more. You can also add popular publications, such as The New York Times or Vanity Fair, or add Etsy to shop right from Flipboard. You can find thousands of websites, RSS feeds and interesting sources like Politico and Brain Pickings, or explore magazines being created on Flipboard in By Our Readers -- just tap the red ribbon and use the Content Guide to get started.Flipboard also lets you enjoy all your social networks.

CNET Australia is not responsible for the content of this Publisher's Description. Trapit. Feast Your Eyes On Recipe Curation Site Gojee. There’s no shortage of food recipe sites on the web for virtually any kind of food. In fact, trying to find a recipe online can be overwhelming with all of the options available. Enter recently launched foodie favorite Gojee, which curates recipes from food bloggers around the web in a visually beautiful way. On Gojee, you can search for recipes by ingredient, either via ‘cravings’ or by one ingredient you have in your pantry.

You can also input your dislikes or allergies and Gojee will make sure to surface recipes without these ingredients. Besides the fact that all the recipes look absolutely delicious, one of the things that makes Gojee compelling is the photography and imagery that accompanies each recipe. Gojee is also attempting to make your life easier by allowing you to import your rewards card info from your grocery store of choice, and the site will give you recipes based on the items you have purchased. Qwiki. Your Personal Newspaper. Swiftly.org | Verifying and Filtering News (FOSS) News.me. The Death of the Feed. I remember in 2001 when I first heard about RSS. Back then, we still called them weblogs, and there were so few blogs that it was news when a new one started.

For example, I distinctly remember reading excitedly about a promising new VC blogger named Jeff Nolan from SAP Ventures. At first, I just visited selected blogs regularly, checking for updates like I did on my sports websites. Then I learned about RSS and started following blogs using Bloglines. For years, my RSS reader was my most important source of information. But gradually, I've found it's getting displaced. In some ways, it's back to the future--once again, I fond myself checking just a few sites and services. Here are my information consumption habits: Perhaps the is the natural long-term balance; more personalized than the old pre-Internet mainstream media, but with a core of commonly read information to help set the agenda. All My Faves | My Homepage.

Boing Boing. Taptu – instant access to all your interests in one beautiful little app. Paper.li – read Twitter and Facebook as a daily newspaper.