Thanks a lot for sharing these tips! This really helpful. Please continue having these updates. One comment on the Twitter feeds that I learned when trying to set it up - the Twitter API doesn't allow access to private Twitter accounts. So, only if your Twitter account is not private you can add Twitter lists to the Reader feed.
Thanks for watching, Justus! Glad you found this helpful :) And yes, that's correct. We can only access your Twitter lists (or other Twitter lists) if they are public.
@@readwise-official - one setting is the privacy setting of the Twitter list and the other is the privacy setting in "Audience, Media and Tagging - that should also not be flagged. At least this is what I experienced.
Hi, I've added most newsletters with RSS when available, but some are not. In this case, I subscribed with the dedicated Reader address, which works. However, I can't figure out how to arrange these newsletters in the same folders as RSS ones. How can I do this? Thanks a lot!
Hi Erin, thanks for the tutorial. Later in the video you are speaking about high volume feeds. Is there some resource where can I learn more about this? What is an exact limit? And what happens when a feed reaches this limit? Thanks 😊
Glad you enjoyed it! For high-volume feeds, it's not a hard and fast cutoff. The app won't stop working if your document count reaches a certain threshold, you might just notice things are a bit slower. We usually consider any feed that generates more than 50 articles per day to be high volume. Hope this helps!
I've been with you for a fair bit but found that really useful. It appears that Twitter/X feeds need to be public in order to subscribe to them via RSS (which would make sense), correct?
Thanks a lot for sharing these tips! This really helpful. Please continue having these updates. One comment on the Twitter feeds that I learned when trying to set it up - the Twitter API doesn't allow access to private Twitter accounts. So, only if your Twitter account is not private you can add Twitter lists to the Reader feed.
Thanks for watching, Justus! Glad you found this helpful :) And yes, that's correct. We can only access your Twitter lists (or other Twitter lists) if they are public.
@@readwise-official - one setting is the privacy setting of the Twitter list and the other is the privacy setting in "Audience, Media and Tagging - that should also not be flagged. At least this is what I experienced.
Hi, I've added most newsletters with RSS when available, but some are not.
In this case, I subscribed with the dedicated Reader address, which works. However, I can't figure out how to arrange these newsletters in the same folders as RSS ones. How can I do this?
Thanks a lot!
Hi Erin, thanks for the tutorial. Later in the video you are speaking about high volume feeds. Is there some resource where can I learn more about this? What is an exact limit? And what happens when a feed reaches this limit? Thanks 😊
Glad you enjoyed it!
For high-volume feeds, it's not a hard and fast cutoff. The app won't stop working if your document count reaches a certain threshold, you might just notice things are a bit slower.
We usually consider any feed that generates more than 50 articles per day to be high volume. Hope this helps!
I've been with you for a fair bit but found that really useful.
It appears that Twitter/X feeds need to be public in order to subscribe to them via RSS (which would make sense), correct?
Thanks for watching Terry! Yes, that's correct. Twitter lists will need to be public in order for us to access them.