Google is cleaning house. On Wednesday the company announced plans to purge Google Reader, Google Cloud Connect, CalDAV API, Snapseed's desktop versions for Mac and Windows, and a handful of other products and services as part of an effort to focus on its core products.

Google is cleaning house. On Wednesday the company announced plans to purge Google Reader, Google Cloud Connect, CalDAV API, Snapseed's desktop versions for Mac and Windows, and a handful of other products and services as part of an effort to focus on its core products.
Google Reader will shutter July 1, giving the RSS feed's devoted users a few months to port their subscriptions to another service. RSS has been on the decline in recent years, Google said, which is why the 8-year-old Reader is shutting down.
More instantaneous news sources such as Twitter, Facebook, and news apps have led to the downfall of RSS feeds and the readers that aggregate them. In a strange twist, Twitter users took to the social network to express outrage about Reader's closure.
But fear not, RSS diehards: Some alternative readers to check out include Pulse, Flipboard, and The Old Reader, which describes itself as "just like the old Google Reader, only better."
Google Reader and the rest of today's discontinued products join the ranks of 70 services Google has closed since 2011.
"We need to focus," wrote Urs Hölzle, Google's senior vice president of technical infrastructure. "Otherwise we spread ourselves too thin and lack impact."
Many of the other services were closed because they were duplicates of existing Google products or could easily be accomplished using another Google service.
Let us know if you have a favorite RSS reader and where you plan to move your subscriptions when Google Reader shuts down.
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