The social media platforms that are most used by people in the tech industry vary depending on their specific interests and needs (obvs). But some of the most popular social media platforms — and the ones that provide the most resources and networking opportunities to tech professionals right now — seem to be:
- GitHub
- YouTube
- Mastodon?
What else? Tell us which platforms do you rely on the most to stay informed in your industry and which are down for the count.
Oldest comments (22)
Stackoverflow, is it also a "social network"? I guess so if even Github is one ...
dev.to ... if you call it social media. Is the only one I open pretty much every day. Instagram gets the second place, although I can go days without opening it.
+1, and LinkedIn every now and then
Same. I've even got it as a recurrent daily task in Todoist -- "read at least one dev.to article".
I'm always sure to read through Dev.to articles daily.It's great to read different perspectives on tech topics and keep up with the latest trends and developments. It keeps me inspired, motivated and informed on the latest advances in the tech world, making me a more informed developer overall.
The only ones I really use are Reddit, Imgur, Mastodon, Pixelfed and YouTube, though it's fair to say I don't use YouTube as "social media" since I generally have comments ad-blocked.
I get tips on things on other places from their meta-discussions on Reddit. I talk to people I know on various chat places. I don't read news sites. I don't use Facebook, Twitter or LinkedIn (though I do have a joke account on a couple of them, mostly to park the name).
There are lots of places to stay informed about the things I'm interested in without using traditional SM. Does DEV count as SM?
I rely on Reddit, DeviantArt, and DEV orwith GitHub. (Probably GitHub more than DEV.)
I'm mostly just on mastodon these days.
Sometimes I open twitter, but the algorithm there is just too insistent on showing me things that will get me outraged enough to interact so I usually don't stay very long.
Algorithms can often provide a solution to a problem or help an organization reach a goal. However, they can also fail if not designed or implemented properly. In such cases, the algorithm may deliver inaccurate or incomplete results, or produce incorrect end-results. Additionally, algorithms can be affected by variables that weren't previously considered. As a result, they may not work as intended and can even produce unintended or undesirable outcomes.
I am afraid that these anti-social algorithms work exactly as designed, increasing interaction even if that means encouraging hate speech etc., see Angry by design: toxic communication and technical architectures
Yep. It's very noticeable tbh; twitter used to be all fluffy nice things until I got a few TERF posts in my timeline and made the mistake of interacting with them; since then twitter has CONSTANTLY trying to bait me into more outrage by recommending me that shit all the time. So these days my feed is full of the stuff and it's just not an enjoyable experience anymore. And the worst part is twitter won't even let me report it. They just don't list hate speech as a reason in the report form.
everyone saying dev.to makes the comment section looks like written by bots lol
But I agree, I like this platform because its simple and the whole content is technical.
Medium.com is def worth browsing through once or twice a week
I wasn't aware before, but there is at least one comment that does sound like it was written by chatGPT.
Linkedin
Twitter
Github
Reddit
Youtube just for music
LinkedIn and dev.to
As the creator of Lomray, I have to be on LinkediN more often
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