A curated collection of talks about React Native and related topics, organized by year.
Awesome React Native Talks is a curated GitHub repository listing video presentations about React Native and related topics. It solves the problem of discovering high-quality conference talks and educational videos by providing a filtered, organized collection maintained by the community. The list is updated as new valuable talks are released.
React Native developers of all levels looking to learn from conference presentations, and educators or team leads seeking recommended talks for training purposes.
Developers choose this over searching YouTube or other platforms because it offers a pre-vetted, organized collection that saves time and ensures quality. Its community-driven approach means it stays current with the best new talks.
:sunglasses: A curated list of talks about React Native or topics related to React Native
Open-Awesome is built by the community, for the community. Submit a project, suggest an awesome list, or help improve the catalog on GitHub.
The list is hand-picked by the maintainer to include only talks found valuable, ensuring high-quality content over quantity, as stated in the README's philosophy.
Talks are grouped by year from 2015 to 2019, making it easy to explore content from specific time periods, clearly outlined in the README structure.
Accepts suggestions through pull requests with a 'PRs Welcome' badge, allowing the list to grow with community input, as mentioned in the README.
Provides links to related repositories like awesome-react-native and awesome-react-talks, offering broader learning opportunities as recommended in the README.
The list is organized only by year, lacking categorization by topics such as performance or testing, which limits targeted learning and requires manual scanning.
Relies entirely on external video links that may break over time, and the README doesn't mention any maintenance strategy for dead links or updates.
As a basic markdown file, it has no built-in search, filtering, or interactive elements, making it less user-friendly compared to dynamic platforms.