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Ask HN: Where do all the web devs talk?
44 points by LinguaBrowse 6 hours ago | 26 comments

I've been using Twitter / X for a good decade now, and while I've found it's a great place to connect with native app dev communities (I'm well connected with the React Native scene), I really struggle to connect with any web devs.

There are a few big names like Adam Wathan who are pretty active on Twitter of course, but considering how widespread web dev is, I see precious few up-and-coming web devs coding in public.

So, where are they? I have explored BlueSky a bit, but again it feels a bit like tumbleweeds (though maybe that's just my luck as a small account).

Are web devs more old-school, posting on bulletin boards and forums? Or is X still the answer, and I'm just getting aggressively packed into a different bubble?

… Or is it all realtime communication, like Slack and Discord, these days?

alex-moon 14 minutes ago | parent | next [-]

I am kind of surprised no-one has mentioned the obvious: Hacker News. Unless I've misunderstood your question, the bulk of web dev discussion happens in technical posts on personal and business blogs, which are then aggregated right here. It's a big part of why I'm on here.

If you're talking more about chat, the more messy "pair programming" side of web dev, I have always found this happens in actual dev teams who are working on the same product or for the same business. You do absolutely get chat like this at conventions - I have been to DjangoCon and PyCon back in the day and there were enormously useful discussions at those - but devs need to have something in common to talk about. As someone else has said here already, web dev is a far far broader topic than you might think - I have often found speaking to other devs I did not understand what it was they were doing. Alberta Tech did one on this: https://www.instagram.com/reel/DBSpm2CNuGF/?igsh=NGttZzk5NzB...

assimpleaspossi an hour ago | parent | prev | next [-]

I don't feel the need to have daily contact or discussions with other web devs over technical matters. Standards should move slowly and thoughtfully so such discussions are more suited to blogs and daily chats are only water cooler talk and socialization. It's just not as valuable unless you're trying to understand a concept but, hopefully, that's not a need on a daily basis.

rimmontrieu 3 minutes ago | parent | prev | next [-]

I just check HN for worthy news, everything else is just noise. I miss the old days of forums.

austin-cheney 15 minutes ago | parent | prev | next [-]

There used to be many excellent web development communities, but almost all of them have died more than 10 years ago. You can still find some good on topic conversation on IRC.

These communities died because experienced developers wanted to talk about product and emerging capabilities. People entering web development just wanted to just talk about frameworks and trends. The experienced people stopped contributing once everything becomes about tool literacy and conversations about framework literacy are boring to everyone so even the conversation killers would stop showing up once it’s apparent the scene is killed.

whinvik 12 minutes ago | parent [-]

Interesting. That's exactly what I feel about most subreddits. Go to r/Python for example.

It's an endless stream of basic tool/library questions. Put me off reddit quite a bit.

iozguradem an hour ago | parent | prev | next [-]

You don’t see them because social media algorithms works for to improve your doom scrolling time. You’re not allowed to decide who to follow anymore. You have to see that they decide for you. Those people who you want to follow are only valuable for you, not for social media platforms.

mmmattt 42 minutes ago | parent [-]

This still isn’t true for Twitter like platforms like the ones OP mentioned, you see only posts from people you follow, in chronological order. If it’s not on by default, you can very easily turn it on from the main screen, and from my experience it never reverts.

oneeyedpigeon 32 minutes ago | parent [-]

I had the opposite experience with X: it would frequently reset my view to "for you". I ended up writing a tampermonkey script to work around it until I gave up on X altogether-and I do the same for platforms like YouTube. Bluesky, on the other hand, hasn't repeated this problem at all.

MrDresden 2 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

There is a very large presence over at Mastodon when it comes to people well versed in web standards. The public discussions are often very lively (in a good way).

felixthehat 5 minutes ago | parent | next [-]

yeah check out https://front-end.social - some popular front end dev accounts:

https://mastodon.social/@firefoxwebdevs

https://social.lol/@db

https://front-end.social/@piccalilli

https://mastodon.social/@davatron5000

https://indieweb.social/@addyosmani

https://front-end.social/@jensimmons

https://mastodon.social/@adactio

https://zachleat.com/@zachleat

https://front-end.social/@rem

https://front-end.social/@chriscoyier

https://front-end.social/@AmeliaBR

https://front-end.social/@rachelandrew

https://webtoo.ls/@astro

https://webtoo.ls/@antfu

https://front-end.social/@bramus

https://front-end.social/@5t3ph

q-base 2 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Any tips on how to find those people or discussions?

kortilla 2 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

Can you link to some lists or an example discussion to seed my list to follow? Mastodon seems stalled out but I think it’s just a discoverability issue.

koolala 13 minutes ago | parent | prev | next [-]

WebXR has a good WebXR Discord

https://discord.gg/ webxr

prohobo 17 minutes ago | parent | prev | next [-]

I don't think there are any places where devs "just talk" anymore. It used to be IRC, and my experience of that was to login, join a channel and see two or three people arguing about something technical - and I could just jump in. Conversations would naturally flow throughout the day between a core group of chatters and random drop-ins.

Now most devs are on Discord and supposedly Telegram; on Discord the discussion is stilted and disjointed so badly that it's not worth even following anything. 99% of chat is people posting memes, emoji reacting, or asking questions no one answers. Sometimes people talk briefly about something then the conversation dies for days. On Telegram, I just haven't been able to find anything that wasn't a broadcast channel for some news aggregator.

On X, the platform dynamics push conversations into grift or broadcasting from more famous people, while morons try to one-up each other in the comments. I couldn't care less about some guy "building in public" in 2026, while all of their blog posts and tweets are pointless gimmicks and vagueposts meant to generate engagement and get eyes on their projects, instead of stimulating discussion.

What this fragmentation and social media incentives have led to is just... broadcasting. You got Youtubers like ThePrimeagen and Wookash. Everything else is kinda dead.

rozenmd 2 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Twitter, still.

Despite several attempts to move off, the center of gravity is still there.

flakeoil 42 minutes ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Web dev is quite a big subject. I suppose you have to focus on a certain framework or technology.

Probably narrow down on: - Laravel - Rails - Django - React - VueJS - Javascript - Typescript - PHP - Ruby - Tailwind - CSS - MySQL - PostgreSQL etc...

raaron773 2 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Everywhere... I have seen good devs on Reddit, Discord, Mastodon and even IRC.

asimovDev 2 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

I browse my LinkedIn feed (yeah, I know) and I often see discussions pop up between people from my network, albeit nowadays it's mostly about AI tools.

I see discussions pop up on /r/webdev on reddit, but not a super active subreddit.

on 4chan there used to be /wdg/ (maybe there still is, but i haven't been to that website in years at this point)

I bet a lot of discussions happen on Slack servers for specific frameworks, but I don't have a lot of experience with using those except asking questions in the #questions channels

Bedlow 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

I'm only a casual dev but I see a lot of chat on Reddit, or Lemmy, the fediverse alternative. There's tech folk also using Matrix.

phendrenad2 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

I think that X was the big web dev community, and as soon as it was taken over by rocket man, people scattered to the wind. I think most, however, didn't actually go anywhere and just decided to be less social.

arccy an hour ago | parent | prev | next [-]

web is a visual medium: must be tiktok

ruuda an hour ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Mastodon

gethly an hour ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Discord channels. Though you have to find them out on your own.

kittikitti 4 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

I've found that layoffs and RTO have multiplied the toxicity of development communities. People will openly threaten to call your HR department if you say something wrong. Developers and engineers aren't trying to get better, they're just harming each other in a loop until the most evil one survives. It's cut-throat but not even in a good way, just extremely anti-social and aggressive.

I don't recommend any development communities. If you want to try Discord, many people who will try to get you fired are available to chat with. I talk with long time friends who are developers but it's mainly really sad conversations.

makeitcount 2 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

For high quality, low-noise discourse check out niche places, especially the friendly ones like: https://elixirforum.com

DANmode 2 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

> Are web devs more old-school, posting on bulletin boards and forums? Or is X still the answer, and I'm just getting aggressively packed into a different bubble?

> … Or is it all realtime communication, like Slack and Discord, these days?

Yes to all.

Friends + threads like these!

Try searching Twitter using key terms on xcancel (or another proxy) in order to find more relevant accounts to follow, and seed your algorithm with.

Unless you originally started using the account for niche tech purposes, your niche interests can remain a minor part of your bubble for sure.