Git Blogs

Page 1 of 8 (144 Blogs)
Graham Helton
2/7/2026 EN

Graham Helton

EO Short Description (2–3 lines): Graham Helton is a security-focused engineer and writer covering Kubernetes security, offensive security research, and infrastructure internals. His blogs and notes explore real-world attack paths, cloud and container security, Linux systems, and practical lessons from red team and defensive work.

Dustin Specker
2/7/2026 EN

Dustin Specker

Dustin Specker is a software engineer and technical writer focused on Go, Kubernetes, and modern testing practices. He writes in-depth articles on Ginkgo/Gomega, OpenTelemetry tracing, Kubernetes networking, and improving developer workflows through better tooling and observability.

Randy Zwitch
2/1/2026 EN

Randy Zwitch

Randy Zwitch is a software engineer specializing in Python and data engineering. His blog features detailed tutorials on building and optimizing Python tools like PyArrow with GPU/CUDA support, Docker workflows, and high-performance data processing.

Paul Onteri
2/1/2026 EN

Paul Onteri

Paul Onteri is a software engineer passionate about Python, AI, cloud computing, and modern web development. His blog shares practical guides, innovative projects, and insights to help developers learn, experiment, and break barriers in tech.

Zell Liew
1/31/2026 EN

Zell Liew

Zell Liew is a front-end developer, writer, and creator known for deep, practical explorations of CSS, JavaScript, accessibility, and modern web tooling. His work blends thoughtful technical guidance with personal reflections on life, work, and growth, and is frequently featured on CSS-Tricks and Splendid Labz.

Gregory Brown
1/31/2026 EN

Gregory Brown

Gregory Brown is a software engineer and open-source contributor known for his work at the intersection of Python, Rust, build systems, and developer tooling. His writing focuses on performance, packaging, reproducible builds, and large-scale infrastructure, including projects like PyOxidizer and Mercurial.

 Mara Averick
1/28/2026 EN

Mara Averick

Mara Averick is a data enthusiast and R programmer who shares insights, tutorials, and tips on data analysis, visualization, and reproducible workflows. She creates and explores tools in the R ecosystem, including packages like {datapasta}, and enjoys making data more accessible and visually engaging.

Mark Litwintschik
1/28/2026 EN

Mark Litwintschik

Mark Litwintschik is a Big Data, AI, GIS, and networking consultant with international experience, helping clients across the UK, USA, Europe, and beyond. He specializes in large-scale data analysis, geospatial insights, and technology consulting for major corporations and organizations.

Brian Coyner
1/25/2026 EN

Brian Coyner

Brian Coyner is a seasoned software engineer, technical leader, and public speaker specializing in mobile and software architecture. He helps teams solve complex problems using core software principles, GoF design patterns, strong testing practices, and thoughtful API design. He is currently a Lead Software Architect (Staff+ Engineer) at NISC, focusing on scalable, reliable, and user-centric mobile solutions.

 Ian Lewis
1/22/2026 EN

Ian Lewis

Ian Lewis is a software engineer based in Tokyo who writes about containers, Kubernetes, DevOps, and programming practices. His blog covers real-world engineering topics, career reflections, and practical tooling insights from working with cloud-native systems.

 Pascal Landau
1/21/2026 EN

Pascal Landau

Pascal Landau is the Technical Director of Marketing Intelligence and Technology at About You SE & Co. KG. Passionate about backend PHP development, Google BigQuery, and data-driven solutions, he also enjoys sharing knowledge, problem-solving techniques, and insights on software development and digital marketing.

Yoel Zeldes
1/21/2026 EN

Yoel Zeldes

Yoel Zeldes is an algorithm engineer at AI21 Labs with a background in computer science from Hebrew University. He specializes in machine learning, NLP, computer vision, and distributed computing, focusing on data-driven solutions and clean, elegant code.

Lucas Roesler
1/21/2026 EN

Lucas Roesler

Lucas Roesler is a senior engineer at Contiamo with a background in mathematics, web development, and machine learning. He writes about programming, CI/CD, Go, Linux, and modern engineering practices, sharing practical lessons from real-world projects.

Antti K. Koskela
1/18/2026 EN

Antti K. Koskela

Antti K. Koskela is a Microsoft MVP and Azure solutions architect sharing practical tips on Microsoft technologies, web development, and cloud architecture. His blog documents real-world problem solving, tinkering, and professional insights.

Lucas F. Costa
1/14/2026 EN

Lucas F. Costa

Lucas F. Costa is a software engineer and writer sharing thoughtful perspectives on JavaScript, TypeScript, Rust, and open-source development. A former Chai.js and Sinon.js maintainer and YC-backed founder, he writes about testing, code quality, and well-engineered software.

Paul Armstrong
1/14/2026 EN

Paul Armstrong

Paul Armstrong is an experienced software engineer focused on Node.js, JavaScript, and modern web development. He builds and maintains popular open-source tools for React, performance benchmarking, and scalable user interfaces.

Barbara
1/13/2026 EN

Barbara

Barbara is an Azure Technical Lead at OGD IT Services, Microsoft Azure MVP, MCT, and GitHub Star, focusing on Azure automation, DevOps, PowerShell, and Infrastructure as Code while actively teaching and speaking in the community.

Fred Schott
1/13/2026 EN

Fred Schott

Fred Schott is a Software Engineer based in San Francisco, specializing in modern web technologies and JavaScript. He has worked at Google on Web Components tooling, led platform engineering efforts at WorkLife (Cisco) to dramatically improve performance and reliability, and helped Box transition from a PHP monolith to a modular Node.js architecture. He’s an experienced speaker, writer, and advocate for high-quality web engineering.

Kyle Shevlin
1/13/2026 EN

Kyle Shevlin

Kyle Shevlin is a software engineer based in Portland, Oregon, who cares deeply about quality in code, writing, and craftsmanship. He focuses on continually improving his skills and helping other developers do the same, while balancing his professional life with competitive golf, gaming, and community-driven learning.

Steven Giesel
1/12/2026 EN

Steven Giesel

Steven Giesel is a Senior Software Engineer and Microsoft MVP with over 13 years of experience, specializing in .NET and modern backend development. He shares deep technical knowledge across topics such as C#, EF Core, RavenDB, distributed systems, and cloud-native architectures, and is an active speaker in the .NET community.

Ole Begemann
1/12/2026 EN

Ole Begemann

Ole Begemann — iOS and macOS developer based in Berlin, working primarily as a contractor. He writes thoughtfully about software development and is the co-author of Advanced Swift, a widely respected book on modern Swift programming. His work focuses on clarity, correctness, and deep understanding of Apple platforms.

Mitul Suthar
1/2/2026 EN

Mitul Suthar

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.

Brent
1/1/2026 EN

Brent

Brent — Curator of Stitcher’s Community Feed, a community-driven, hand-curated content aggregator highlighting thoughtful, high-quality writing from across the web. The feed focuses on software engineering, open source, web development, infrastructure, and the human side of building technology. Readers can browse recent picks, follow via RSS, or contribute their own suggestions.

Andrew Lock
12/31/2025 EN

Andrew Lock

Andrew Lock — Full-stack ASP.NET developer and creator of .NET Escapades, sharing in-depth tutorials and practical insights on ASP.NET Core, C#, and modern .NET development, backed by a PhD and author of ASP.NET Core in Action.

Maxence Poutord
12/19/2025 EN

Maxence Poutord

Maxence Poutord est un développeur logiciel spécialisé dans l'architecture Vue.js, les workflows Git et le développement web moderne. Découvrez des insights issus de 3 ans de maintenance d'une énorme base de code Vue.js incluant 9 leçons essentielles, décisions d'architecture pour faire évoluer de grandes applications et tests d'intégration avec Testing Library. Explorez des tutoriels Git complets incluant des cheat sheets avancées, la compréhension des mécanismes internes de git commit et l'optimisation de gitconfig personnalisé. Apprenez la migration de Gatsby.js vers Astro, l'intégration de commentaires Giscus dans les blogs Astro et 10 ans d'expérience en blogging. Suivez pour la sensibilisation à la cybersécurité sur les arnaques crypto, des projets open-source incluant docker-symfony et l'assistant IA YoutubeMate, et des insights pratiques de développement web. Accédez aux projets phares et 62+ articles de blog sur JavaScript, les tests et l'architecture logicielle.

Gunnar Morling
12/11/2025 EN

Gunnar Morling

Morling.dev is the personal blog of Michael Morling, a software engineer and architect with deep expertise in Java, Spring, JVM internals, architecture, performance, and developer tooling. His writing focuses on practical and detailed explanations of topics such as Spring framework internals, microservices design, JVM garbage collection, performance tuning, clean architecture, Gradle builds, and language features that matter in real projects. Michael often breaks down subtle behaviors of the JVM and Spring ecosystem, helping developers understand why things work the way they do and how to improve reliability and efficiency in production systems.

Dr. Axel Rauschmayer
11/29/2025 EN

Dr. Axel Rauschmayer

2ality.com is the long-standing blog of Dr. Axel Rauschmayer, devoted to JavaScript, TypeScript and modern web development. The blog was launched in March 2005 and remains one of the deepest and most respected resources for ECMAScript, language fundamentals and evolving JS features. Axel writes detailed, clear, and specification-aware analyses of JavaScript behavior, type system tricks in TypeScript, best practices, and the internal mechanics of web technologies. The content ranges from diving into conditional types, tuple types, ESM-based package publishing, to tutorials on Node.js and shell scripting.

Cassidy Williams
11/29/2025 EN

Cassidy Williams

Cassidoo.co is the personal blog of Cassidy Williams, a well known developer, speaker, and educator who writes about JavaScript, React, career growth, web development, dev tools, and learning in public. Her posts mix technical insights with approachable explanations, covering topics like UI patterns, coding tips, productivity workflows, and the human side of software engineering. Cassidy is known for her weekly newsletter, open-source work, and community involvement.

Daniel Janus
11/15/2025 EN

Daniel Janus

Blog.DanielJanus.pl is the personal blog of Daniel Janus, a veteran programmer from Poland who writes about Clojure, Rust, functional programming, developer culture, and personal productivity. Daniel combines deep technical insights with reflections on how code, words, and emotions interact in a developer’s life. His posts range from “Corner-cases of Comparing Clojure Numbers” to explorations of CSS compression and personal essays about ADHD and workspace clutter. The blog is bilingual (Polish and English) and features both short essays and detailed code-driven articles. With an emphasis on thinking clearly, rethinking assumptions, and learning continuously, Daniel’s writing appeals to engineers seeking both intellectual depth and human perspective.

Simon Willison
11/13/2025 EN

Simon Willison

SimonWillison.net is the long-running blog of Simon Willison, a software engineer, open-source creator, and co-author of the original Django framework. He writes about Python, Django, Datasette, AI tooling, prompt engineering, search, databases, APIs, data journalism, and practical software architecture. The blog includes detailed notes from experiments, conference talks, and real projects. Readers will find clear explanations of topics such as LLM workflows, SQL patterns, data publishing, scraping, deployment, caching, and modern developer tooling. Simon also publishes frequent micro-posts and TIL entries that document small discoveries and tricks from day-to-day engineering work. The tone is practical and research oriented, making the site a valuable resource for anyone interested in serious engineering and open data.

Tanner Dolby
11/10/2025 EN

Tanner Dolby

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.

Melroy van den Berg
11/10/2025 EN

Melroy van den Berg

Melroy van den Berg writes hands-on articles about GNU/Linux, networking, security, DevOps, software engineering and embedded hardware. The blog mixes step-by-step guides and deep dives, from DNS fundamentals with command-line experiments to self-hosting, servers, tooling and practical troubleshooting. Clear categories cover levels from beginner to advanced, making it useful both for learning core concepts and refining day-to-day workflows.

Matt Segal
11/10/2025 EN

Matt Segal

Matt Segal is a software engineer and tech lead who writes about software design, Python development, system architecture, and the craft of engineering teams. His blog focuses on practical approaches to building reliable, maintainable software - from dependency management and code reviews to continuous delivery and scalable system design.

Lea Verou
11/9/2025 EN

Lea Verou

Lea Verou is a web standards expert, developer, and designer with a PhD from MIT in Human-Computer Interaction. She has worked as Product Lead at Font Awesome, helped shape the web as a member of the W3C Technical Architecture Group, and has been part of the CSS Working Group since 2012. Her open-source tools like PrismJS and Color.js are used by millions of developers worldwide. Lea is also the author of a bestselling CSS book, a frequent conference speaker, and an advocate for making technology simpler, more usable, and open for everyone.

Michael Lynch
11/8/2025 EN

Michael Lynch

Michael Lynch – Developer, Indie Founder and Technical Writer Michael Lynch shares honest and detailed stories from his journey as a software engineer and indie founder. His blog covers topics like building sustainable businesses, code reviews, software craftsmanship, and lessons learned from running and selling his own startup, TinyPilot. Each post reflects a mix of engineering precision and real-world experience, written with clarity and humor. Readers can find tutorials, retrospectives, and essays that go beyond code to explore motivation, productivity, and the human side of software development. This blog is a must-read for developers, indie hackers, and anyone who enjoys thoughtful writing about technology and entrepreneurship.

David Boothe
11/3/2025 EN

David Boothe

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.

Matt Stauffer
11/3/2025 EN

Matt Stauffer

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.

Matt Layman
11/3/2025 EN

Matt Layman

mattlayman.com is a blog by Matt Layman, a software engineer who focuses on building complex web applications, primarily using Django. He shares his expertise through regular live streams on YouTube, where he teaches others how to build advanced SaaS projects. Matt is also deeply involved in the tech community in Frederick, Maryland, where he founded Python Frederick and has helped organize local tech events. Currently, Matt is a Senior Staff Software Engineer at Included Health, working to enhance the patient experience through technology. His blog offers insights into web development, community involvement, and his career journey.

Daniel Feldroy
11/3/2025 EN

Daniel Feldroy

Daniel Feldroy’s blog, daniel.feldroy.com, is a personal site by coder, author, and speaker Daniel Feldroy, known in the tech community as "pydanny" and co-author of Two Scoops of Django. Based in London, Daniel shares insights about his life, including his work at Kraken Tech, a part of the Octopus Energy Group focused on tackling climate change. The blog, built using the FastHTML framework, covers various topics beyond Python, reflecting Daniel's broader interests in coding, writing, and Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu. His former site, pydanny.com, now redirects here to reflect his evolving focus beyond just Python.

David Walsh
11/2/2025 EN

David Walsh

David Walsh Blog is a long-standing hub for web developers who want to grow through real-world code and honest experience. It features hands-on tutorials, deep dives, and opinion pieces on modern web technologies - from JavaScript, CSS, and HTML5 to frameworks, APIs, and performance techniques. With a focus on practicality and clarity, the blog helps developers of all levels write cleaner, faster, and smarter code while staying in tune with the evolving web.

Kent C. Dodds
11/2/2025 EN

Kent C. Dodds

KentCDodds.com is the personal website and blog of Kent C. Dodds, a software engineer, educator, and open-source contributor known for his work in the React ecosystem. He writes about modern web development, testing, accessibility, performance, and developer experience, focusing on how to build reliable, maintainable, and scalable applications. Kent is the creator of popular libraries such as Testing Library and Remix, and his articles often highlight practical approaches to writing better React components, handling state, and improving user experience. Beyond tutorials, the site features courses, workshops, podcasts, and conference talks, all aimed at helping developers learn by doing. With his teaching-first philosophy and clear explanations, KentCDodds.com has become one of the most trusted learning resources in the React and JavaScript community.

Josh Comeau
11/2/2025 EN

Josh Comeau

Josh W. Comeau is a frontend developer, educator and creator known for his engaging tutorials and deep dives into modern web development. On his blog he writes about React, CSS, animation, accessibility and design systems, combining technical precision with visual storytelling. His interactive posts make complex concepts easy to understand and help developers learn how the browser really works. Josh is the author of the popular course The Joy of React. His articles often explore the creative and human side of programming, mixing code with empathy and fun. His blog stands out for its clarity, practical value and beautifully crafted interactive examples.

Robin Wieruch
11/2/2025 EN

Robin Wieruch

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.

Dan Luu
11/2/2025 EN

Dan Luu

DanLuu.com is the personal blog of Dan Luu, known for long-form essays that mix systems thinking with careful measurement and clear writing. The topics range from computer latency and input lag, testing versus informal reasoning, and concurrency bugs, to industry pieces on developer compensation and curated lists of programming blogs worth reading. Many posts include data, historical context, and reproducible reasoning, which is why the site is often cited in courses and shared across the developer community. The design is intentionally minimal, which puts all attention on the ideas.

Julia Evans
11/2/2025 EN

Julia Evans

Jvns.ca is the personal blog of Julia Evans, a software engineer and writer known for making complex technical topics easy and fun to understand. Her posts cover Linux, networking, debugging, command-line tools, and systems programming, often using real-world examples and colorful visual explanations. Julia’s writing focuses on practical learning, showing how tools like strace, tcpdump, git, and Python actually work under the hood and helping developers gain confidence in understanding what their systems are doing. She is also the creator of the popular Zine series, which turns topics like debugging, shell commands, and performance profiling into engaging illustrated mini-books. With her clear and approachable teaching style, Jvns.ca has become one of the most beloved resources for developers who want to truly understand how computers work.