A curated list of awesome curated lists, serving as a meta-directory for finding high-quality resource collections across countless topics.
Awesome Awesome is a meta-curated list that collects and organizes hundreds of specialized 'awesome' lists covering programming languages, frameworks, tools, and various technology domains. It serves as a directory of directories, helping users quickly find high-quality, community-maintained resource collections on almost any technical topic.
Developers, researchers, students, and technology enthusiasts who need to quickly find curated resources on specific topics without searching through individual repositories.
It saves time by providing a single entry point to hundreds of specialized awesome lists, ensuring users discover community-vetted resources rather than relying on generic search results or incomplete personal collections.
A curated list of awesome curated lists! Inspired by inspiration.
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 README includes awesome lists for diverse areas from Python and Docker to niche topics like space and community detection, providing a comprehensive starting point for almost any technical domain.
Each linked awesome list is maintained by the community, ensuring resources are generally high-quality and relevant, as implied by the 'awesome list' culture embraced in the project description.
By aggregating hundreds of specialized lists into one place, it saves developers the effort of searching for individual awesome lists across platforms like GitHub.
The list is organized alphabetically by topic name, as shown in the README, making it straightforward to browse if you know what you're looking for.
The README is a plain list of links with no descriptions, ratings, or automated updates, so users must manually check each list for quality and currency, adding an extra layer of effort.
There's no search function or categorization by domain, making it tedious to find specific resources without scrolling through the entire alphabetical list, as evident from the README structure.
Since it's a manual compilation, links might become broken over time, and the README doesn't indicate update frequencies or active maintenance, risking user frustration with dead ends.
With multiple awesome lists for some topics (e.g., two entries for Laravel), it doesn't provide insights into which list is more comprehensive or better maintained, leaving users to guess.