

The developers say there are still more themes hidden away as easter eggs in the app, but I have yet to find any. But when you read late at night and don't want to wake up a partner, there's also a night theme with a dark background and white typography.

You get a day theme with soft gray-and-white interface elements and black type on a white background. One of the great things about Unread is how it supports themes to change all of the interface elements of the app. When viewing a list of stories, you'll get options for changing the grouping of stories, a refresh button, and a "mark all as read" button. While reading a story, this means you'll see options to mark the story unread, star (to favorite it), view it on Web, and share it. The content-aware controls are also a neat addition, changing to give you the best tools for what you're currently looking at. The result is an excellent way to read the latest news and blogs without distractions. Sinclair says he wanted to design it with warm typography and a sparse interface, doing away with the standard RSS reader interface that feels more like an e-mail client. A swipe from left to right goes to the last screen you were looking at, while a swipe from right to left brings up content aware controls. Once you've opened a news story, you'll see a headline at the top, the source, and the story laid out simply below with nothing to get in the way of reading. Most of the time, however, you'll get the full Unread experience. A tap goes to the story, but it depends on the source whether you'll see the whole story in Unread Some Web sites only supply a headline and a blurb, but require you to visit the site to read the whole story. Headlines are displayed with a brief synopsis, and you can swipe upward to see more stories from all your sources. Once you're all set up, Unread is a simple yet elegant reading experience. But for daily RSS reading fans, it won't be as much of a big deal (assuming that serious fans of RSS probably use one of the supported readers already). Unfortunately, this strategy leaves people out who are new to RSS.
