A curated list of YouTube channels offering free technology tutorials across programming, web development, data science, and more.
Awesome YouTubers is a curated GitHub repository listing educational YouTube channels that teach technology topics. It serves as a directory for developers and learners to find high-quality, free video tutorials on subjects like web development, machine learning, computer science, and cybersecurity, eliminating the need to search through YouTube's algorithm.
Developers, students, and self-learners looking for structured, free video tutorials to learn new technologies or deepen their understanding of specific tech domains.
It saves significant time by aggregating and categorizing trusted educational channels in one place, offering a community-vetted alternative to YouTube's recommendation system for finding reliable tech content.
An awesome list of awesome YouTubers that teach about technology. Tutorials about web development, computer science, machine learning, game development, cybersecurity, and more.
Open-Awesome is built by the community, for the community. Submit a project, suggest an awesome list, or help improve the catalog on GitHub.
Channels are meticulously organized into technology domains like Web Development, Machine Learning, and DevOps, as shown in the README's table of contents, enabling targeted learning.
The list is open for contributions via GitHub, allowing users to submit updates and new channels, which helps keep it current and comprehensive.
It includes links to community-created lists for non-English languages such as Spanish and Brazilian Portuguese, broadening access to diverse learners.
Encompasses both practical tutorials and theoretical concepts across all skill levels, from beginner to advanced, covering areas like cybersecurity and game development.
There is no built-in search, filtering, or rating system, making it harder to quickly find the best channels for specific needs or evaluate quality.
Updates rely solely on user contributions, which can lead to outdated entries or gaps in coverage for emerging or niche technologies.
While curated, the list does not provide indicators of channel quality or popularity, requiring users to vet content themselves through trial and error.