A curated, community-driven list of categorized newsletters for developers, designers, and tech professionals.
Awesome Newsletters is a curated GitHub repository that aggregates and categorizes hundreds of newsletters for developers, designers, and technology professionals. It solves the problem of discovering high-quality, topic-specific newsletters by providing a structured, community-maintained directory across numerous tech domains.
Developers, software engineers, designers, tech leaders, and anyone in the technology industry looking to stay updated through curated email content. It's particularly useful for those seeking to deepen knowledge in specific areas like a new programming language, framework, or professional skill.
Developers choose Awesome Newsletters because it offers a massive, well-organized, and vetted collection in one place, saving hours of searching. Its community-driven nature ensures the list remains fresh and comprehensive, covering both popular and niche interests within the tech ecosystem.
A list of amazing Newsletters
Open-Awesome is built by the community, for the community. Submit a project, suggest an awesome list, or help improve the catalog on GitHub.
Organizes newsletters into over 50 specific categories like React, DevOps, and AI, making it easy to browse by tech domain or interest as shown in the detailed table of contents.
Built and maintained through GitHub contributions, ensuring the list stays updated with new and niche newsletters, as highlighted in the contribution guidelines.
Each newsletter includes a brief summary and direct link, helping users quickly evaluate and subscribe without extra research.
Encompasses both mainstream and specialized areas like system design and resilience engineering, offering resources for diverse tech roles.
Relies on community submissions without a vetting process, so some listings may be inactive, low-quality, or biased, as the README doesn't mandate quality checks.
Lacks built-in search or filtering features; users must manually scroll through markdown files, which can be tedious for large lists.
Changes depend on pull requests, meaning the list may not reflect the latest newsletter launches or closures in fast-moving tech areas.