![share in google reader share in google reader](https://devhd.files.wordpress.com/2009/03/picture-59.png)
As you can see in the screenshot above, the Digg Reader interface is very clean and no-nonsense. You should be able to receive all the latest updates to your favorite websites – whether it’s new photos, videos or articles – and they should automatically sync with your mobile app so that you can share, subscribe, save or organize the content however you like. Phase One involves keeping Reader simple, fast, and, most importantly, easy to import your feeds and folders into Digg. The company is aware that power users “depend on the availability, stability, and speed of Reader every day,” so it’s committed to getting the bare-bones tool up and running first, then expanding its functionality over the next 60 days and beyond. While Digg envisions a more feature-rich Reader than its predecessor, at this point, Digg is just looking to keep the lights on on your feeds so that you don’t miss any updates to your favorite websites when Google Reader shuts down in exactly two weeks. Digg announced in a blog post today that its Web-based RSS reader will open for business on June 26, which gives you exactly five days to move your feeds to Digg before Google makes them vanish. Google Reader users looking for a new home for your RSS feeds have just enough time to give the Digg Reader a try before the Google-powered service is retired on July 1.