Steve Sanderson
Steve Sanderson is a Microsoft engineer working on ASP.NET since 2010, creator of Knockout.js, author of ASP.NET books, and a frequent conference speaker focused on making web platforms delightful for JavaScript developers.
Steve Sanderson is a Microsoft engineer working on ASP.NET since 2010, creator of Knockout.js, author of ASP.NET books, and a frequent conference speaker focused on making web platforms delightful for JavaScript developers.
Dillion Megida is an Internal Developer Advocate at Adyen, creating practical web development courses and tools while focusing on developer experience, automation, CI/CD, and documentation workflows.
Aman Mittal is a documentation consultant at Expo and experienced technical writer, specializing in cross-platform mobile and web development, with over 150 programming articles published since 2017.
Simon Wicki is a Berlin-based Frontend Engineer and freelancer specializing in modern web and hybrid applications, performance optimization, SSR, and framework migrations, with experience leading large-scale apps used by millions.
Liran Tal is an AI security researcher and Node.js security expert focusing on securing agentic AI workflows, MCP, and software supply chains through research, education, and open-source work.
Ankit Sharma is a senior software engineer and technical author specializing in Microsoft technologies, Angular, and Blazor, with over a decade of experience building and teaching modern web applications.
Gunnar Hillert’s blog covers high-precision GNSS systems, RTK positioning, and practical tech insights, including electronics, robotics, and software development projects.
Paweł Chudzik is a programming blog covering practical how-tos and deep dives into Docker, Java, Python, Git, testing, and software architecture.
Mitul Suthar’s Coding Blog focuses on DevOps, cloud engineering, and modern developer tooling, covering topics like GitHub Actions, CI/CD pipelines, security scanning, Azure DevOps, containers, and automation to help developers build, secure, and ship software efficiently.
Alex Merced — Developer and technical writer sharing in-depth insights on data engineering, Apache Iceberg, data lakehouse architectures, Python tooling, and modern analytics platforms, with a strong focus on practical, hands-on learning.
Manuel Meyer — Azure Architect, Trainer, and Microsoft MVP specializing in Microsoft Cloud solutions, cloud onboarding, performance management, and troubleshooting, sharing hands-on insights about Azure, M365, and modern cloud technologies.
Alvin Ashcraft — Creator of Morning Dew, a daily curated link roundup for Windows and .NET developers, and a Microsoft technical writer with 29+ years of experience sharing high-quality resources on .NET, Azure, web, and modern software development.
Blog.brecht.io is the personal blog of Brecht Billiet, a software architect and GenAI specialist formerly focused on Angular and front-end frameworks. He now helps organizations worldwide build intelligent AI agents, modern chatbots, and scalable GenAI solutions. With a long history of writing about Angular architecture, RxJS, large-scale single-page applications, and state management, Brecht blends deep front-end expertise with his current focus on GenAI and automation. His blog includes technical tutorials on building reactive web applications, designing scalable systems, adopting best practices for Angular, and now extends to AI solution design, agent development, and strategic consulting in advanced technologies. The style of writing is practical and experience-based. Brecht draws on his work training teams, architecture design, and mentoring developers, offering insights that both mid-level and senior engineers can apply directly in real business contexts.
Blog.CodeWithDan.com is the personal blog of Dan Wahlin, Cloud Developer Advocate at Microsoft and a well known educator in the JavaScript and cloud ecosystem. Dan writes about JavaScript, TypeScript, Angular, Azure, Docker, Kubernetes, AI assisted development, and modern cloud architecture, always focusing on practical examples and real world scenarios. His articles explain how to build scalable applications, use Azure services effectively, and integrate AI, Realtime APIs, and tools like MCP or TypeChat into production projects. Much of the content comes from his work on courses, workshops, and developer training, which makes the writing clear, actionable, and grounded in real engineering experience.
Blog.mgechev.com is the personal blog of Minko Gechev, Lead for Web Frameworks at Google and a widely recognized engineer in the JavaScript and Angular ecosystem. Minko writes about Angular, JavaScript, TypeScript, frontend architecture, web performance, and AI assisted development, mixing clear code examples with insights gained from building frameworks at scale. He is the creator of influential open source projects and has been awarded by Google and the President of Bulgaria for the impact of his contributions. His articles often explore advanced topics such as LLM powered development, predictive prefetching, reactive rendering, framework design, and large scale JavaScript tooling. Beyond engineering, he shares lessons from giving over a hundred conference talks and from leading major web initiatives at Google. Minko is also the co founder of Rhyme.com, an EdTech platform offering hands on technical training. He built the platform and engineering team starting in 2015. In 2018 Rhyme became Coursera’s first acquisition, marking a significant milestone in his career.
TannerDolby.com is a personal blog by Tanner Dolby, a software engineer and mathematician who writes about modern web development and programming fundamentals. His articles explore topics such as JavaScript, Node.js, Eleventy, Sass, TypeScript, Python, and C++, offering clear, example-driven explanations of core concepts and real-world workflows. The blog covers everything from client-side rendering and DOM manipulation to creating custom Eleventy collections, setting up Node.js servers, and solving algorithmic challenges in different languages. Tanner also dives into accessibility, performance optimization, open-source collaboration with Git, and static site design, focusing on writing code that is both efficient and easy to understand. Each post is concise, practical, and written to help developers at all levels strengthen their problem-solving skills and coding foundations.
David Boothe, a seasoned web-app engineer, shares observations from his craft: code architecture, frontend/back-end integration, productivity hacks, and reflections from his real-world development work. His posts aren’t purely theoretical, they’re grounded in building real applications and improving with each iteration.
mattstauffer.com is the personal blog of Matt Stauffer, a web developer, author, and educator specializing in Laravel, PHP, and full-stack web development. Matt shares tutorials, insights, and resources on modern web development, covering topics like backend development, JavaScript, and Laravel best practices. He is also the author of Laravel: Up & Running and a host of the Laravel Podcast. Through his blog, Matt provides practical advice for developers, project management tips, and insights into maintaining a productive development workflow. His content is designed to help developers of all levels improve their skills and stay updated with the latest trends in the web development industry.
BenNadel.com is a personal blog by Ben Nadel, a web development expert, covering a wide range of topics including JavaScript, ColdFusion, Angular, and various modern web technologies. The blog features deep-dive tutorials, practical coding tips, and insights on web development best practices. With a focus on real-world problem-solving, Ben shares his extensive experience as a full-stack developer, making the site a valuable resource for developers at all levels.
RobinWieruch.de is the personal site and blog of Robin Wieruch, a software engineer and educator known for clear, practical tutorials on React, TypeScript, Next.js, GraphQL, Node.js, and testing. The articles focus on real projects and common problems such as state management, authentication, data fetching, pagination, performance, and testing strategies. Robin is the author of The Road to React and other hands-on guides. He publishes step by step walkthroughs that pair code with explanations, so readers learn the concepts and the reasoning behind them.