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RSS Icon Pillow: Read Feeds In Your Dreams

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My RSS reader (Google Reader is my choice) has become somewhat of an addiction. I have filled my reader with more subscriptions than I could ever read in one sitting, but what can you do, knowledge is power right?

I think this awesome RSS Icon Pillow would remind me that I have plenty of feeds sitting, waiting on the net for me to read. In other words, a reminder to get my ass out of bed earlier. Anything that can motivate you to wake up in the morning is a good thing. Might just have to pick one up, only $15.

Don’t forget to add Gearfuse to your feed readers for awesome gadgets, design tech news and all-around geeky goodness (nearly) every day!

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Instant Giveaway: Get A Free Copy of SmartRSS 2 For Your iPhone

So yesterday, I did a small write up of a little app called SmartRSS 2. You can find it on the iTunes App Store for $1.99 but today and today only, you can get a free copy of SmartRSS 2 for free. How? By emailing me at vince@gearfuse.com and requesting one. That’s it. You email me, I’ll send you a code you can enter in iTunes for a free download. Excellent. Everybody wins!

So hurry up. The contest ends 24 hours from now and I only have 5 of these promo codes available. First come, first serve!

UPDATE: That was quick! Enjoy SmartRSS 2, dear readers, as we are out of codes!

Snowl: Mozilla’s Take On Messaging In Your Browser

Is there anything Mozilla doesn’t create that facilitates your web surfing experience? Firefox 3 came out back in June, yet Mozilla is still working hard to provide its users with top end interactivity for its interweb softwares. Now, Mozilla wants to take its browser to the next level with instant messaging integrated into your web browsing. It’s called Snowl, that’s Snow and Owl combined for the less observant. Mozilla Labs lists a few key ideas behind their design phase:

  • It doesn’t matter where messages originate. Whether they come from traditional email servers, RSS/Atom feeds, web discussion forums, social networks, or other sources, they are all the same.
  • Some messages are more important than others, and the best interface for actively reading important messages is different from the best one for casually browsing unimportant ones.
  • A search-based interface for message retrieval is more powerful and easier to use than one that makes you organize your messages first to find them later.
  • Browser functionality for navigating web content, like tabs, bookmarks, and history, also works well for navigating messages.

As of now, Snowl is still in its prototype phase but is free to download at the link provided below. It supports two sources of messages: RSS/Atom feeds and Twitter. No word on whether or not Ogio will make a Snowl backpack. If they did, I’d rock it. Hit the jump for more information:

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