Previously my developer-centric (aggregated) feed of choice came from javablogs.com. However it’s signal to noise ratio has been on a downward spiral as of late. It’s increasingly difficult to find any useful nuggets amongst all the foreign (and graphic/non ascii character posts) and the off-topic ‘this is what my life is like’ posts. I want concise, to the point tech discussions and java.blogs isn’t cutting it (I’ve been reading it less frequently the past couple months, perhaps it’s gotten better?).
Enter the DZone.
I’ve been a subscriber for since it’s inception and although it got off to a bit of a rocky start, I’m quite impressed with the quality of the feed now. It’s doesn’t specifically target Java and perhaps it is a bit too focused on ‘framework X vs. framework Y’, but it does generally deliver interesting aggregated content.
Check it out.
According to my Google Reader trends, java.blogs still has far higher daily traffic. ~156 items/day vs. ~29 items/day. In fact, that’s even higher than the digg feed (~103 items/day).
UPDATE: As pointed out by Rick in the comments, DZone is a community, not unlike digg, where users submit links and are able to vote on submissions. Higher votes translates to a front page spot. Java blogs is a basic aggregator where it will implicitly pickup all posts from any feed you provide. Thanks Rick and Tim for commenting.
-
Pet Peeve: Don’t email my password to me in plain text You know the drill.
Signup for some random service on the internet
Receive a confirmation email with your account information
or
Forget a password for some random service ...
-
Eclipise Memory Analyzer (MAT) I must say the Eclipse Memory Analyzer looks pretty slick. There is some pretty good material over on the developers blog. Lastly, there was a talk on it ...
-
Open-source Web-based Code Review Tool: Rietveld Guido van Rossum, of Python fame, has recently released a Django-based application that enables web-based code reviews... Rietveld.
It supports any language and currently can hook into Subversion repositories. You ...
-
An implementation of the JVM in Javascript? Caught this over on JavaPosse Google Groups.
Essentially, some bright fellows over in Japan have developed a bytecode->javascript compiler. There's a demo floating around that took a Tetris ...
-
Facebook Chat? So it looks like the Facebook Chat service has finally started rolling out to my network (Facebook Chat has been mentioned previously).
Not quite sure how ...
Latest Entries
- Lessons Learned as a Project Lead
- Good ANTLR Resource
- Testing with Unitils
- Headed to Kelowna for a short vacation (and the laptop stays behind)
- Seam + Groovy + Maven : Nice Simple Hibernate POJOs
- Pet Peeve: Don’t email my password to me in plain text
- Eclipise Memory Analyzer (MAT)
- caBIG Annual Meeting - A developers perspective
- OS X + Java6: java.lang.UnsatisfiedLinkError: /usr/lib/java/libObjCJava.A.dylib
- Getting started with JBoss Seam and Maven
Blogroll
Mar 22nd, 2007 at 3:22 am
Hi Adam, Tim here from dzone
It’s really cool when we see people who enjoy our site or find it useful, and thanks for your kind words!
A quick question, is there anything specific you’d like to see more of on the site? I can add it to my growing list of things I look out for when searching peoples blogs for links
(I personally do try and steer clear of the X vs Y link when selecting links, as more often than not they are from a distinctly biased viewpoint, and compare solutions to different problems)
Thanks again for this post, and I’m really glad you like dzone!!
Cheers
Tim
Mar 22nd, 2007 at 3:32 am
Thanks for your kind words, Adam. The whole DZone team appreciates your comments.
It’s important to remember that DZone’s feed is “edited” by votes from the DZone community. Every single vote in the queue of upcoming stories has a LOT of power over whether or not a link gets promoted to the front page. In fact, only about 30% of submitted links actually do make the front page, and very often the difference is just a single vote.
I guess what I mean is that “active” participation in the community, specifically by voting in the queue, can significantly impact the selection process. If you vote the queue, even occasionally, it is a tremendous contribution to the quality of the community.
Best regards,
Rick