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How do you stay up to date as a Software Engineer

Felix Vo on October 30, 2019

As a developer, stay up to date is really important. But how can we survive in the world of tech, which rapidly changes over and over? I personall...
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miniscruff

Typically I just read a few headlines here and there from what I get from my phone. The Google feed stuff. I wait until it comes time to make a decision and research then. Like starting a new app or when we need to move in a new direction.

Too much noise on tech news to be worth my time.

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David J Eddy

It is indeed difficult to keep up with everything changing in tech. Things change so fast. Similar to you Felix I read, every day. At the very least 1 hour per day is dedicated to reading and staying current with target technologies. Then, once a week or so, spend an hour discovering new tools and tech.

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Adron Hall

I wrote about exactly this about ~6 months ago here > compositecode.blog/2019/07/11/the-...

However, I've actually narrowed that down to just a little tweeting and dev.to, and otherwise I'm in the code every single day. I barely have time to keep up with anything as of late on account of shipping code. 😞

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Charbel Sarkis

Big fan of one piece here

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Felix Vo

new dev article 😩
new one piece chapter 😏
lol

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Jared

Big fan of Pocket to manage reading lists.

Starting using gettoby.com/ as well within the last couple months. Love it. Allows me to quickly inventory resources when I'm researching something and come back to it later (rather than leave the browser open with 20+ tabs).

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Davide Bellone

I do something similar, except for the Kindle. In fact, I have a Kobo.

The main problem with it is that all the code embedded from GitHub, Gists etc cannot be shown, since they are not "static" text content. So most of the articles are kinda useless.

And that's why when I write an article I use plain Markdown and I don't include Gists or similar.

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Felix Vo

yes, I tried multiple tools like epub.press/ still the same 😭

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Damjan Dimitrov

Thanks for the suggestion! I just tried Feedly and it feels like it's the only thing I need for managing articles to read, it's amazing!

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Aelaf

Hey Felix, there is android app named Readably (@readablyapp) got awesome rss experience works decently even in weak connection. both free and premium version

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Anton Yarkov

I use app.raindrop.io/ as a long live storage for articles in addition to pocket, which is used as a short live storage.