Linguin changes almost every day. Some weeks that means a new language. Other weeks it's a feature people kept asking for, or a quiet fix to the thing that's been annoying you. If you use Linguin a lot, that pace is one of the best parts of it. It also means you usually have no idea what changed since you last logged in.
You are not going to check an updates page every morning. I wouldn't either. So most of what ships slides right past you, and you find out weeks later by chance, if you find out at all.
That is what the feed is for. Linguin posts its updates as RSS, a plain standard way for a site to announce what's new so other software can read it. Set it up once and the updates start coming to you instead.
The feed is a live changelog
It's a running log of everything that ships, in the order it ships. Whatever goes out shows up there the moment it goes live, big releases and one-line fixes alike.
If you like what Linguin does, this is the most useful page on the whole site. It's also the one you'll forget exists.
So don't count on remembering it. Hand it to something that checks for you. Both feeds are public, no account needed:
- Updates feed:
https://linguin.xyz/@news/rss - Articles feed:
https://linguin.xyz/@articles/rss
Grab the first one. That's the changelog.
Drop it into a reader
The laziest option takes about ten seconds. Copy the feed link, open whatever reader you already use, like NetNewsWire, Feedly, Inoreader, or Thunderbird, and paste it in. Linguin's updates now sit next to everything else you follow.
That's fine if all you want is the occasional glance. The catch is that a reader gives you everything and sorts none of it. When something ships most days, that list gets long fast, and the updates you care about end up buried under the ones you don't.
Let an AI agent read it for you
This is the part worth five minutes of setup. Point an AI agent at the feed and tell it what you actually care about. It reads every update so you don't have to, and only pings you when something matches.
You can get specific:
- Tell me when anything about Spanish or pronunciation ships.
- Give me a three-line summary of this week's updates.
- If a bug I complained about gets fixed, let me know.
A plain reader can't do any of that. The agent can, and that filtering is the whole point when a product moves as fast as Linguin. If updates landed once a month you wouldn't bother. At a few a day, having something sort them for you is the difference between staying current and quietly giving up.
Skip the agent if you want
If you would rather not set up an agent, a normal automation handles the simple version. In Zapier, add the "RSS by Zapier" trigger, choose "New Item in Feed," and paste the feed URL. Every new update can then go wherever you already look, whether that's Slack or your inbox. Make works the same way if that's your tool.
And if you build on top of Linguin rather than just learn with it, the feed doubles as an early warning. A new API method or a pricing change reaches you the moment it's live, in a channel you already watch, instead of surprising you in production.
Set it up once and stop refreshing
The whole point is to stop checking. You don't keep a changelog open in a tab, you let it reach you. Use a reader for the full stream, or an agent for just the parts meant for you.
Linguin keeps shipping either way. The only thing the feed changes is whether you hear about it the day it happens or trip over it a month later. Two links, no account needed. Set one up and forget about it.
