A curated list of awesome iOS Twitter accounts worth following, organized by people, conferences, blogs, and podcasts.
Awesome-iOS-Twitter is a curated list of Twitter accounts that are valuable for iOS developers. It organizes accounts into categories like People, Conferences, Blogs, and Podcasts to help developers discover influential voices and resources in the iOS ecosystem. The project serves as a companion to the Awesome iOS repository, focusing specifically on Twitter as a platform for community engagement.
iOS and macOS developers looking to follow relevant experts, conferences, blogs, and podcasts on Twitter to stay updated with industry trends and best practices.
It saves time by pre-filtering high-quality accounts, provides a structured way to explore the iOS Twitter community, and includes a ready-to-subscribe Twitter List for immediate access.
A curated list of awesome iOS Twitter accounts
Open-Awesome is built by the community, for the community. Submit a project, suggest an awesome list, or help improve the catalog on GitHub.
Accounts are neatly divided into People, Conferences, Blogs, and Podcasts, as shown in the README's structured content sections, making navigation intuitive.
The project actively welcomes pull requests, with a dedicated CONTRIBUTING.md file, ensuring the list can evolve and stay relevant through community input.
Includes a direct link to a pre-made Twitter List, allowing users to subscribe to all curated accounts with one click, saving setup time.
Inspired by the popular Awesome iOS repository, lending trust and relevance, and serving as a focused companion for Twitter-specific resources.
Updates rely on pull requests, so the list may not quickly include new or trending accounts, lagging behind the fast-paced Twitter ecosystem.
Exclusively focused on Twitter, missing other platforms like Mastodon or direct blog links, and dependent on Twitter's API stability for the list functionality.
Curation depends on community contributions, which might bias towards well-known figures or specific niches, overlooking emerging or diverse voices.