I see quite a lot of #Science posts expressing concern if The Public will follow their authors' #TwitterMigration over on here.

Here's the thing: they don't even have to. Every #Mastodon account has an #RSS feed. For example, here's mine:
https://mstdn.social/@rysiek.rss

Every hashtag has an RSS feed as well (as seen from a given instance), for example:
https://mstdn.social/tags/Science.rss

Your audiences can follow you without ever setting up an account on fedi, with any RSS reader.

@rysiek I use an RSS reader (in my case Inoreader, have also used Vienna) every day to catch up on news and posts from my favourite websites and blogs - much quicker than listening to podcasts or watching videos.
@Janmakarta @rysiek Do you have a recommendation for RSS reader apps on iOS? Something like Vienna that doesn't need a web server to do the job for it. Like Feedly does.
@robigan Reeder doesn’t need one and you can sync with iCloud.
NetNewsWire doesn’t need one either I think.
@nielsk I've seen Reeder and it looks amazing but am also a student who's not willing to spend 10€ on just to read his news. But I might as well try it

@robigan then try NetNewsWire. It is actually nice and free. I just don’t use it because there is no Mac app iirc

https://apps.apple.com/de/app/netnewswire-rss-reader/id1480640210?l=en

‎NetNewsWire: RSS Reader

‎It’s like podcasts, but for reading. NetNewsWire is a free and open source RSS reader. It’s fast, stable, and accessible. NetNewsWire shows you articles from your favorite blogs and news sites — and keeps track of what you’ve read. If you’ve been going from page to page in your browser looking fo…

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