A meta-curated list of all awesome lists for frameworks, libraries, and software across various technologies.
Awesome All is a meta-curated directory that aggregates all the awesome lists for frameworks, libraries, and software across various technologies. It serves as a central hub for developers to discover high-quality, community-vetted resources without searching multiple repositories individually. The project solves the problem of fragmented resource discovery by providing a single entry point to specialized awesome lists.
Developers, researchers, and tech enthusiasts looking for curated resources across programming languages, tools, and domains. It's particularly useful for those exploring new technologies or seeking the best libraries and frameworks for their projects.
Developers choose Awesome All because it saves time by centralizing access to hundreds of specialized awesome lists, ensuring they find community-approved resources quickly. Its broad coverage and direct linking to source lists make it a reliable starting point for resource discovery.
A curated list of awesome lists of awesome frameworks, libraries and software
Open-Awesome is built by the community, for the community. Submit a project, suggest an awesome list, or help improve the catalog on GitHub.
Centralizes hundreds of specialized awesome lists into a single repository, saving developers from searching multiple sources individually, as evidenced by the extensive contents list in the README.
Lists are vetted and maintained by the community, ensuring high-quality resources across domains, with contribution guidelines encouraging updates and additions.
Provides immediate links to awesome lists for specific technologies like Python and machine learning, facilitating quick exploration without navigating GitHub manually.
Includes categories from Android to DevOps, covering a comprehensive range of programming languages and software areas as shown in the README contents.
The usefulness hinges on linked awesome lists being current; some lists might be outdated or abandoned, leading to stale or broken resources without warning.
Serves only as a directory without summaries or evaluations, requiring users to navigate to each list for in-depth information, which adds extra steps for research.
Offers a static list format in the README with no built-in search or categorization beyond provided links, making it inefficient for specific queries compared to dynamic tools.