A reading app · for developers

Read what your
stack is shipping.
All in one feed.

inFeeder blends 400+ curated dev sources with trending GitHub repos and hot Stack Overflow questions — filtered by the languages, databases and writers you actually follow.

Free to install iOS & Android 400+ sources
9:41
Home
T

GlassWorm malware attacks return via 73 OpenVSX "sleeper" extensions

Published 16 hours ago
/ /
Newly Trending Repos
HKUDS-AI
lymarket-ai-trading
Mean reversion and AI-assisted paper trading for lymarket: Node.js API, OpenAI market insight…
Python ★ 93
3 votes

Getting alerted when N CPU cycles consumed by polling the file descriptor

DG Article Series For You In Dev Genius by Rajiv Gupta.
  • Co Learn CoCo With Rajiv — Snowflake Performance Optimizer Custom Skill
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One feed:
articles · repos · questions
A quick tour

See it in motion.

InFeeder home feed
/01 · Home

A blended feed.

Articles, GitHub trending repos, hot Stack Overflow questions — plus Article Series that bundle multiple new pieces from one writer you follow. All in one feed.

Search and Browse By Category screen with stack pills
/02 · Search

Browse by stack.

Pick languages and databases. Find sites and writers across 400+ sources, then follow either. The feed reshapes itself.

Writer profile with tags and recent articles
/03 · Writers

Follow the writer, not the URL.

Tap any writer to see their full body of work — every article they publish, anywhere across our 400+ sources.

Notifications screen showing new articles from followed writers and sites
/04 · Notifications

Get pinged when they publish.

Per-writer and per-site notifications. The bot crawls 400+ feeds twice a day so you don't have to refresh anything.

Bookmarks screen with saved articles
/05 · Bookmarks

Save anything for later.

Bookmark an article, a repo, an SO question. Like the ones you want to remember. It's all there when you're ready to read.

The trick

Three signals, one feed.

Most readers give you a wall of articles and call it a day. inFeeder interleaves three signals — articles, trending GitHub repos, and hot Stack Overflow questions — and filters every one of them through the stacks and writers you actually follow.

What you follow is what you see.

No mystery algorithm. The graph is built from your choices — the languages and databases you picked, the writers you tap follow on, the sites you subscribed to. That's it.

A bot crawls 400+ dev sources twice a day. It indexes new articles, links them to their authors, and tags them by stack. GitHub trending and Stack Overflow's hot questions get pulled on the same loop and filtered through your tags.

The result is a feed where every card is something you'd have opened a tab to find anyway — without the twelve open tabs.

Three card types you'll see in the feed
Published on Simon Willison's Weblog · ✓ Following

A pelican for GPT-5.5 via the semi-official Codex backdoor API

S
by Simon Willison · 16 hours ago
Newly Trending Repos · GitHub

HKUDS-AI / lymarket-ai-trading

python · Mean reversion and AI-assisted paper trading · ★ 93
Article Series For You In Hacker Noon · by Maxi Contieri

AI Coding Tip 009, 010, 012, 015, 017 — five new pieces from a writer you follow

M
Bundled because you follow Maxi Contieri
Inside the feed

Four streams, one feed.

inFeeder doesn't just aggregate blogs. It blends four distinct signals — articles, authors, repos, and questions — filtered by the stacks and writers you actually care about.

/01

Articles from 400+ curated blogs.

Hand-picked feeds across every stack — from Simon Willison's weblog to ITNEXT, Dev Genius, LogRocket, OSnews, Phoronix and hundreds more. Indexed twice a day.

/02

Pings when your writers publish.

Follow individual authors — not just their sites. Get a notification the moment they publish anywhere across the 400+ sources. The graph thinks in writers, not URLs.

/03

Trending repos in your stacks.

GitHub's weekly-rising projects, filtered by the tags you've followed. Rust developers see Rust repos. Kotlin devs see Kotlin repos. No general trending soup.

/04

Hot Stack Overflow questions.

The discussions people are wrestling with right now, filtered by your tags. A live pulse on what your community is debugging this week.

Your stacks

Pick your stacks. The feed reshapes itself.

Tag-based following from day one. Pick the languages and databases you write, learn, or maintain — and inFeeder filters every stream through your interests.

Languages
Assembly
Bash
C/C++
C#
Clojure
D
Dart
Elixir
F#
Go
Groovy
Haskell
HTML/CSS
Java
JavaScript
Julia
Kotlin
Lua
Obj-C/Swift
Pascal
PHP
Python
R
Ruby
Rust
Scala
SQL
Swift
TypeScript
VBA
WebAssembly
Databases
PostgreSQL
MySQL
MongoDB
Redis
SQLite
MariaDB
Cassandra
Oracle
SQL Server
DynamoDB
GraphQL
Frameworks
.Net/.Net-Core
Angular
Angular-Js
Ansible
Apache Spark
Asp.Net
Cordova
CryEngine
Django
Drupal
Electron
Express
Flask
Flutter
Hadoop
JQuery
Laravel
Node.js
Pandas
Pytorch
ReactJs
React Native
Ruby on Rails
Spring
Tensorflow
Unity-3d
Vue.js
Xamarin
Platforms
Amazon-web-services
Android
Arduino
Azure
Docker
Firebase
Google-Cloud
Heroku
IBM-Cloud
IBM-Watson
Ios
Kubernetes
Linux
Mac-OS
Raspberry-Pi
Slack
Windows
Wordpress
Other things it does

Small touches that add up.

Bookmarks & likes

Save articles, repos and Stack Overflow questions for later. Like the ones you want to remember. Everything's there when you're ready to read.

Search 400+ sources

Find a site or an author across the whole catalogue and follow either. The next time the bot runs, their new pieces show up on your home feed.

Request a website

Source missing? Tap Website Request from the side menu. Once it's added, the bot picks it up on the next run — twice a day, every day.

From the maker

I got tired of opening twelve dev blogs every morning to see if my favorite writers had shipped anything new. So I built the reader I wished existed.

inFeeder is a one-developer project. The whole thing — the iOS and Android apps, the API, the bot that crawls 400+ sources twice a day, the categorization, the author graph — built and maintained by one mobile engineer who reads a lot.

It's not trying to be Feedly. It's trying to be the feed I actually want: writer-first, stack-aware, honest about why anything is in front of you. If that resonates, I'd love to have you as a reader.

Ahsen Saeed · maker of inFeeder

Try it. It's free.

Available on iPhone and Android. No subscription. No ads. No account required to browse — just sign in when you want to follow something.