All Blogs

Page 36 of 36 (717 Blogs)
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.

Nooshu - Matt Hobbs
11/3/2025 EN

Nooshu - Matt Hobbs

Nooshu.com is a personal blog by Matt Hobbs, a Frontend Developer turned Full-time Engineering Manager based in Oxfordshire, UK. Matt specializes in Frontend web production, focusing on usability, cross-browser testing, accessibility, and search engine optimization. His blog shares insights on web performance, progressive enhancement, accessibility, and building websites that are fast and inclusive. Matt is also a public speaker and contributor to web standards in the UK government, with years of experience in various frontend technologies and platforms.

Ben McCormick
11/3/2025 EN

Ben McCormick

BenMcCormick.org is a blog authored by Ben McCormick, a seasoned software engineer, offering valuable insights on engineering leadership, front-end architecture, JavaScript, and productivity. Since 2012, Ben has written over 180 articles, covering key themes such as feedback loops, managing distributed teams, and front-end design. His posts explore practical, real-world challenges in software development, with a particular focus on JavaScript and React. Ben also shares advice on career development in the tech industry, making the blog a rich resource for both individual developers and engineering leaders.

Ben Nadel
11/3/2025 EN

Ben Nadel

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.

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.

Craig Taub
11/2/2025 EN

Craig Taub

Craig Taub’s blog is where technology meets real-world experience. From JavaScript and Node.js to cloud computing and backend design, each post shares lessons learned, best practices, and honest thoughts from a Tech Lead who’s passionate about open source and testing.

Michał Miszczyszyn
11/2/2025 EN

Michał Miszczyszyn

Type of the Web is a blog by Michał Miszczyszyn focused on modern web development. It offers in-depth tutorials, insights, and expert articles covering technologies like TypeScript, React, Next.js, and the broader JavaScript ecosystem. The site helps developers sharpen their skills and build better, more maintainable applications through clear explanations and real-world examples.

Dan Abramov
11/2/2025 EN

Dan Abramov

Overreacted.io is the personal blog of Dan Abramov, a software engineer best known for his work on React at Meta and as the creator of Redux. The blog explores ideas about JavaScript, React, functional programming, software design, and developer experience, often blending deep technical insight with personal reflection. Dan writes about topics like hooks, state management, debugging, performance, and the mental models behind React, helping readers understand not just how things work but why they were designed that way.

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.

Martin Fowler
11/2/2025 EN

Martin Fowler

MartinFowler.com is the long-running technical blog of Martin Fowler, author, software architect, and Chief Scientist at ThoughtWorks. The site serves as a cornerstone for modern software engineering, featuring influential essays and guides on software architecture, refactoring, agile methodologies, design patterns, and continuous delivery. Martin’s writing combines deep technical expertise with a clear, educational tone, making complex ideas about domain-driven design, microservices, and testing strategies accessible to engineers of all levels. Classic works like Refactoring, Patterns of Enterprise Application Architecture, and Continuous Integration originated from concepts first explored on this blog. With over two decades of archives, MartinFowler.com remains one of the most authoritative and enduring resources in professional software development.

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.

Wes Bos
11/2/2025 EN

Wes Bos

WesBos.com is the home of Wes Bos, a developer and educator known for clear, practical teaching on JavaScript, React, CSS, and Node.js. The site features step by step tutorials, deep dives into modern tooling, and popular courses like JavaScript30, CSS Grid, React for Beginners, and Advanced React. Wes also shares tips on TypeScript, Next.js, performance, accessibility, and VS Code workflows, with a strong focus on writing code that is easy to understand and ship. You will find articles, videos, starter projects, and helpful snippets that take you from concept to working code. He co-hosts the Syntax podcast, which adds industry context and practical advice to the tutorials on the site.

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.

Brendan Gregg
11/2/2025 EN

Brendan Gregg

BrendanGregg.com is the blog of Brendan Gregg, a performance engineer and computer scientist who shares deep expertise in system performance, observability, and kernel-level insights. His content covers topics like eBPF, Linux performance tools (perf, ftrace), flame graphs, and large-scale cloud systems analytics. Brendan writes with clarity about how to analyze bottlenecks, profile production systems, and tune infrastructure for speed and efficiency. The blog features both conceptual discussions and hands-on examples aimed at engineers tackling real performance problems in modern environments. Whether you are interested in kernel internals or high-level system design, BrendanGregg.com offers authoritative material grounded in years of experience.