![]() ![]() ![]() To get rid of a feed, uncheck the box for that site and Chrome will remove its RSS feed. If you’d like to edit the ones you follow, simply tap the gear icon next to the Following tap, then “Manage,” and look for the “Following” option. If you’d like to add multiple sites there, you certainly can. Tapping that will add the RSS feed of that site to that New Tab “Following” section. To subscribe to a site, like the on you are reading, tap the 3-dot menu up top, then at the bottom look for a “Follow” button. Otherwise, in stable Chrome, you can jump through chrome://flags and search for “web feed.” Enable that option and the new “Following” area should show up. If you aren’t seeing the new section in Chrome yet, install Chrome Beta and you likely will. That “Following” section is where the feeds from websites you’ve subscribed to will show up. In Chrome’s stable channel on Android (v94+), the New Tab page will now show you a “Following” section in addition to the Discover feed you’ve been using for a while now. Today, in Chrome on Android, Google is coming back to RSS with an experiment that works a lot like an RSS reader, because why the hell not? We’ve survived with services like Feedly, but RSS has never really been the same without Google being a big part of the experience. ![]() Google tried to kill off RSS several years ago when they cancelled Google Reader to the dismay of countless internet users. ![]()
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