Codetown ::: a software developer's community
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It's a good book, especially for community leaders. In fact, if you like the book you might want to join Jono and about 200 other community leaders for the Community Leadership Summit. This free un-conference runs every year the weekend prior to OSCON. I attended for the first time last year and really enjoyed myself.
Jeff
Thanks, Jeff - between the Community Leadership Summit, OSCON and Open Source Bridge, I may as well move to Portland. Oh well, there's always Portlandia. Yes, the Community Leaders Summit looks like a good conference. Thanks.
And, thanks for inspiring me to take a second look at this book. I just picked it up again and read "The Building Blocks of Building Buzz", which I find to be the greatest reward of being part of an online community. People love to contribute when they feel comfortable enough to actually engage. Do you find yourself agreeing with Jono's approaches in this book and sometimes saying "Hey, I do that when I build communities"?
Codetown is a social network. It's got blogs, forums, groups, personal pages and more! You might think of Codetown as a funky camper van with lots of compartments for your stuff and a great multimedia system, too! Best of all, Codetown has room for all of your friends.
Created by Michael Levin Dec 18, 2008 at 6:56pm. Last updated by Michael Levin May 4, 2018.
Check out the Codetown Jobs group.
Security researcher Sharon Brizinov, in collaboration with Truffle Security, has conducted a sweeping investigation of GitHub's "oops commits", force-pushed or deleted commits that remain archived, and uncovered thousands of secrets left behind, including high-value tokens and admin-level credentials
By Craig RisiSociotechnical design in software development emphasizes creating systems where people and technology thrive by fostering collaboration, emergent coherence, and shared understanding through enabling constraints, leading not only to improved architecture but also to more effective, adaptive, and fulfilling work.
By Ben LindersErin Pañgilinan discusses the future of frontend and backend engineering, where XR and AI converge. She explains how the XR tech stack is evolving with foundation models and AI agents, enabling new use cases in spatial intelligence, code generation, and automation. She shares insights on the shift toward accessible, low-code tools.
By Erin PañgilinanIan Arundale and Matthew Clark discuss the BBC's architecture for handling massive digital moments like general elections. They explain how a serverless-first approach and a focus on three key non-functional requirements - elasticity, resilience, and security - enabled them to build a highly scalable platform. They also share how architects' soft skills are crucial for implementation.
By Matthew Clark, Ian ArundaleAt InfoQ Dev Summit Munich (Oct 15-16), learn directly from the senior engineers building complex systems. This practitioner-led conference offers deep dives on real-world implementation patterns from software leaders at Allianz, Skyscanner, Zalando, and Delivery Hero.
By Artenisa Chatziou
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