06 PEOPLE ✣
Developer Influencers by Platform.
Outside formal DevRel roles, a substantial population of independent technical communicators shapes how developers discover tools, learn, and form opinions. Their reach often exceeds any single company's DevRel function. This file catalo…
Outside formal DevRel roles, a substantial population of independent technical communicators shapes how developers discover tools, learn, and form opinions. Their reach often exceeds any single company’s DevRel function. This file catalogues the most influential individual voices by platform, as of 2024–2026.
Follower and subscriber counts are approximate snapshots; they change quickly. For any production decision, refresh the numbers from the actual platforms.
YouTube
YouTube is now the single most important developer-content platform, edging out Twitter/X (in decline) and Stack Overflow (in collapse). The top channels reach millions of developers per video.
Top general-purpose technical channels
| Channel | Creator | Approx. subscribers (2026) | Focus |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fireship | Jeff Delaney | ~4M | Full-stack, “100 Seconds of Code,” The Code Report |
| Traversy Media | Brad Traversy | ~2.5M | Full-stack tutorials, JS frameworks |
| The Net Ninja | Shaun Pelling | ~1.9M | Web dev tutorials |
| Web Dev Simplified | Kyle Cook | ~1.7M | JS, React, accessible tutorials |
| Programming with Mosh | Mosh Hamedani | ~4M | Beginner-friendly programming |
| freeCodeCamp | (organisation) | ~10M | Long-form courses, often hours-long |
| Coding Train | Daniel Shiffman | ~1.8M | Creative coding, p5.js, processing |
| NetworkChuck | Chuck Keith | ~4M | Networking, cybersecurity, Linux |
| ByteByteGo | Alex Xu | ~1.5M | System design |
| Continuous Delivery | Dave Farley | ~250K | Software engineering practice |
| ArjanCodes | Arjan Egges | ~340K | Python software design |
| ThePrimeagen | Michael Paulson | ~1M+ | Vim/Neovim, software engineering culture |
| t3.gg | Theo Browne | ~550K | Full-stack TypeScript, T3 stack |
| Computerphile | (Brady Haran / Sean Riley) | ~2.4M | Computer science explainers |
Specialised channels
| Channel | Focus |
|---|---|
| Beyond Fireship | Long-form Fireship spinoff |
| Hussein Nasser | Backend engineering, databases |
| Bret Fisher Docker / DevOps | Docker, Kubernetes |
| Techworld with Nana | DevOps, Kubernetes |
| Anthony Sottile (anthonywritescode) | Python deep dives |
| DevOps Toolkit (Viktor Farcic) | DevOps, platform engineering |
| Coding Garden (CJ) | Live coding |
| Andrej Karpathy | ML/AI deep dives |
| Two Minute Papers | ML research summaries |
| Yannic Kilcher | ML paper reviews |
| 3Blue1Brown (Grant Sanderson) | Math, ML intuition |
| Sentdex | Python, ML, finance |
| Corey Schafer | Python tutorials |
Twitch (live coding)
| Streamer | Approx. followers | Focus |
|---|---|---|
| ThePrimeagen | ~280K | Software engineering, NeoVim, Rust |
| Tsoding | ~120K | Hardcore C / live coding from scratch |
| lowbyteproductions | ~50K | Compilers, low-level |
| adamlearns | ~30K | Live programming |
| andy_li | ~10K | Frontend, design engineering |
| theo | (also on YouTube) | TypeScript, live debug |
Twitch’s developer-streaming category is significantly smaller than YouTube’s, but the live format builds tight communities; many top streamers maintain dedicated Discord servers as primary community spaces.
X (formerly Twitter)
X remains an important developer platform, though its dominance has clearly eroded since 2022. Some senior developers remain; many have migrated to Bluesky and Mastodon. Cross-posting is now standard.
Examples of developers with very large followings on X (mid-2026, approximate):
- DHH (David Heinemeier Hansson, 37signals / Rails) — > 700K
- Patrick Collison (Stripe) — > 400K
- John Resig (jQuery creator, Khan Academy) — > 700K
- Brad Frost (design systems) — > 100K
- Cassidy Williams (GitHub) — > 200K
- Kelsey Hightower — > 250K
- Linus Lee (geoffreylitt) — substantial design-engineering presence
- swyx (Shawn Wang) — significant AI-engineering audience
- Theo Browne (t3.gg) — large frontend audience
- Lee Robinson (Vercel) — large Next.js audience
Many platform-specific developer voices (Java, Python, .NET) have lost reach as X’s algorithmic feed deprioritises external links and technical content.
Bluesky
Bluesky grew rapidly as a Twitter alternative, with substantial developer adoption from late 2023 through 2025. By early 2026 it was the secondary platform for many developers, with some treating it as primary.
Notable communities:
- The frontend / web scene migrated relatively completely.
- The Rust and infrastructure scenes are well represented.
- The AI engineering community is split; Bluesky has substantial mindshare but X still has the most senior figures.
Bluesky’s openness (open AT Protocol, real handles, no algorithmic ranking by default) appeals to developer norms. Custom feeds (which can be created and shared) function as a discovery mechanism that X lacks.
Mastodon
Mastodon’s developer community migrated earlier (late 2022) than Bluesky’s. Major instances:
- fosstodon.org — open-source-focused; one of the largest tech instances.
- mastodon.social — generalist.
- hachyderm.io — tech-focused.
- mas.to — large.
- infosec.exchange — security-focused.
Mastodon’s user base is more technically homogeneous and ideologically distinct (federation, open standards, no advertising) than Bluesky’s broader appeal. Many of the most committed open-source maintainers operate primarily on Mastodon.
LinkedIn has grown into a more substantial technical-content platform than it was in the early 2020s, partly absorbing professional-mode content that migrated away from X. Notable patterns:
- Long-form essays and carousels by developer advocates.
- AI/ML thought leadership where personal brand and employer brand intersect (OpenAI, Anthropic, NVIDIA, Hugging Face employees post heavily).
- Many DevRel professionals maintain LinkedIn as a primary content surface in 2026.
Podcasts
| Podcast | Hosts | Focus |
|---|---|---|
| The Changelog | Adam Stacoviak, Jerod Santo | Open source, software industry |
| JS Party | Multiple | JavaScript |
| Go Time | Multiple | Go |
| Software Engineering Daily | Multiple (Jeff Meyerson founded) | Software engineering interviews |
| Software Engineering Radio | IEEE Software | Long-form interviews |
| Syntax.fm | Wes Bos, Scott Tolinski | Front-end / full-stack |
| Latent Space | swyx, Alessio Fanelli | AI engineering |
| Lex Fridman Podcast | Lex Fridman | AI and broader tech |
| Acquired | Ben Gilbert, David Rosenthal | Tech-company histories |
| Practical AI | Daniel Whitenack, Chris Benson | AI for practitioners |
| Talk Python To Me | Michael Kennedy | Python |
| CoRecursive | Adam Gordon Bell | Programming stories |
| Community Pulse | Mary Thengvall, PJ Hagerty, Jason Hand, Wesley Faulkner, Erin Mikail Staples | DevRel and community |
| DevRelX Podcast | SlashData | DevRel and developer marketing |
| Hanselminutes | Scott Hanselman | Long-running, broad tech |
| Real Python | Real Python team | Python |
Newsletters
| Newsletter | Author/Source | Focus |
|---|---|---|
| Pragmatic Engineer | Gergely Orosz | Tech industry / engineering management |
| Console.dev | Console.dev | Open-source developer tools |
| DevRel Weekly | Mary Thengvall | Curated DevRel links |
| Latent Space | swyx | AI engineering |
| TLDR Newsletter | TLDR Newsletter | Daily tech digest |
| The Overflow | Stack Overflow | Developer news |
| Bytes | Bytes (Cassidoo) | JavaScript |
| JavaScript Weekly | Cooperpress | JS |
| Python Weekly | Curated | Python |
| Hacker News Weekly | Various | HN highlights |
| GitHub Octolog / Octoverse | GitHub | Platform updates |
| The New Stack | TNS team | Cloud-native news |
| InfoQ | InfoQ | Enterprise development news |
| Sentry Newsletter | Sentry | Error monitoring / developer news |
How DevRel teams interact with these channels
- Direct presence. Advocates post their own content on X, Bluesky, LinkedIn, dev.to, YouTube, etc.
- Sponsorship. Many top YouTube channels and podcasts run sponsored segments paid for by developer-product companies. Common sponsors include Auth0, Datadog, Snyk, MongoDB, Linode, DigitalOcean, Cloudflare, and many others. Sponsorship rates vary; the most-watched channels can charge $5K–$30K per sponsored video segment in 2024–2026.
- Guest appearances. Senior DevRel figures appear regularly on podcasts. Latent Space, The Changelog, Syntax.fm, and Community Pulse between them feature most field-leading practitioners over any given year.
- Cross-amplification. Newsletter promotion (via SparkLoop-style cross-promotion) has become a major distribution channel.