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Viktor2019-09-01 14:37:52
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Viktor, 2019-09-01 14:37:52

What Russian-language analogues of Habr exist?

What Russian-language sites for IT people do you know, analogues of Habr? Interested in large and small portals where you can maintain your personal blog and write freely on various topics, as well as read programming materials published by IT companies. Until recently, I always read Habr, but it has become a lot of politics around IT, news, articles about some vegetables and fruits.

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5 answer(s)
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Sergey Nizhny Novgorod, 2019-09-01
@Terras

1) There are no analogues of habr.
2) Now the main policy of Habr is aimed at making money on large IT companies. Hence a bunch of worthless articles in company blogs. You really open a habr, and there are some articles of companies, news garbage and holy srachs in the feed.
3) Since the main goal is to milk corporate blogs, Habr puts spokes in the wheels of ordinary authors in every possible way. As a result, many cool authors fled from the habr. Habr, of course, took a step back and gave small indulgences, but it's too late.
4) If you want to directly blog and write whatever you want in it, create your own website, tweet.
5) More clever, high-quality and voluminous articles have recently been published on zuker than on Habré.

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egor_nullptr, 2019-09-01
@egor_nullptr

Here is one, for example https://tproger.ru/

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dmshar, 2019-09-01
@dmshar

For myself, I solved the problem this way. I created an account on feedly, added (and continue to add) sites and blogs that interest me there (by the way, I have three or four topics from Habr there), I look through them once a day. Those. In fact, I get the most "fresh" every day. If you are interested in the title - read on.
This, of course, does not solve the issue of a personal blog. But these are two completely different formats. If you want to write something smart, you can blog anywhere. At least on Blogger, at least on Medium, at least where you like it. There will be a high-quality context - people will catch up. But no - then the site has nothing to do with it.

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dollar, 2019-09-01
@dollar

No one is forcing you to read all the hubs. Subscribe to interesting ones, and read only them.
The problem of separating the interesting from the uninteresting has not been fully resolved not only in Habré, but in general everywhere. Yes, and everyone decides it in their own way. I agree that in our digital age of information overload, this is important. However, to exclude the entire resource from view just because, in addition to interesting articles, there are not interesting ones on it - this is somehow strange.
I can tell you what I did with Toaster as an example. I have selected different question parameters, and now I can filter them programmatically in automatic mode: I receive notifications about interesting questions, I don’t see boring ones at all, and I can watch the rest or not watch in my free time, depending on my mood. For Habr, it might also be worthwhile to come up with something similar, but I don’t hang out there so much that such a decision pays for itself in time.

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McBernar, 2019-09-01
@McBernar

On vc they made a section about technologies.

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