All of the above should be considered pre-alpha quality, more like a whiteboard of insanity. If, despite all these caveats, you'd still like to check out the spool for yourself, point your newsreader at nntp-test.soylentnews.org. There are three groups on the server, soylentnews.discuss, just for general discussion for folks who come by, a test group for testing posting, and the spool itself at soylentnews.test.mainpage.
I look forward to hearing your thoughts and comments below.
[UPDATE: Corrected typos and added links]
(Score: 2) by romanr on Monday July 21 2014, @08:31PM
This tool, although it seems _very_ nice and cool, is not really useful for common user of SN in my opinion. Common user just visits the page, reads the article and comments and moves on. Users don't need special app for that. I'm a huge fan of SN but I wouldn't use such application.
What I do think however, that this App might be very useful for staff and people who often moderate. Such app could have some neat GUI tools for various advanced tasks that are needed.
Another thought about this is, that a mobile app for SN could be useful.
(Score: 2) by cykros on Monday July 21 2014, @08:51PM
I'm not so sure a special application is really required for anyone who uses email from something other than their web browser (and I really hope we haven't slipped into a minority at least on tech sites...). Popping open, say, Thunderbird (or Pine!) and having your emails and Soylent all in the same place is something perhaps more useful to those not already using say, an RSS aggregator, who otherwise have to browse to the site and go through headlines.
But I do agree it shouldn't be pursued to the detriment of, well, most anything. Consider it a "20% time [nytimes.com]" project. I mostly just am really curious to see what'll happen with it if it becomes more wildly successful than most any of us are at this point expecting it to, in part because it is a fairly novel way for an already flourishing community to target the matter of mobile devices and alternative interfaces. The prospect of it becoming even a little bit of a trendsetter seems worth at least poking around at it, or at least that's my $0.02.