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Ask HN: What are your favorite active tech-related subreddits comparable to HN?

151 points| qz_ | 9 years ago | reply

91 comments

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[+] i336_|9 years ago|reply
Right now the only replies list reddit and lobste.rs. That's really depressing :/

Are there really no other decent online communities out there? I'm increasingly disenfranchised with reddit and lobste.rs is invite-only (not my cup of tea). I've been poking around the various *chans to see if I can brave the noise and chaos in the hope that I'll occasionally find a similar calibre of info as what I find on here.

[+] SturgeonsLaw|9 years ago|reply
Unless the title's been edited, it does say "tech-related subreddits", one would expect reddit to feature heavily in the replies :)
[+] ue_|9 years ago|reply
Unfortunately there's not much on the chans either. The ones I used to browse have generally been overtaken, even on tech/programming boards with threads complaining about diversity or they are thinly-veiled alt-right recruitment posts.

I haven't been there for a while, but Lainchan isn't all that bad. Quite slow, though.

[+] angersock|9 years ago|reply
lainchain has a fairly civil and decent programming board, slanting towards beginners but still friendly.

You shouldn't cut yourself out over "invite-only", especially when the site itself tells you where to get an invite. It's a small speed-bump to keep out folks without basic politeness and problem-solving skills, not some sort of elitist thing.

The cold fact of the matter is that any community that pitches a wide tent and allows for everyone to join and talk about whatever is going to be unable to maintain a good signal-to-noise ratio...communities that wish to avoid that need to remain focused and conscious of what content they want and do not want.

It's possible to say "this is content that doesn't belong here" while at the same time not painting the content or submitter as deplorable.

[+] Inconel|9 years ago|reply
If you have any interest in firearms or warfare/military history, /k/ can be surprisingly good at times along with operatorchan. Those are obviously very niche though.
[+] ergot|9 years ago|reply
> I've been poking around the various *chans to see if I can brave the noise and chaos

Make Overchan one of your hops, there's a huge updated list of chans there:

https://www.1ch.us/

[+] yoodenvranx|9 years ago|reply
> lobste.rs is invite-only (not my cup of tea).

I visited lobste.rs once, liked what I saw, realized it was invite only and then I never went back there.

[+] shostack|9 years ago|reply
/r/ppc, /r/adops and /r/analytics

These three tend to have a pretty high signal-to-noise ratio, particularly when asking very advanced and technical questions.

From personal interactions I can vouch for there being many senior to exec level industry folks from a healthy mix of ad tech companies, networks, agencies, brands, etc. on both the buy and sell side.

Everyone is pretty friendly, so while asking basic questions might just get you a link to go RTFM (and really the official docs are often the best starting point...) everyone is pretty friendly and helpful.

Great for those trying to learn more about digital media and analytics all the way up to people with questions or who want to chat about stuff in the industry like header bidding, attribution, enterprise analytics troubleshooting, etc.

And the best part is since we all are living and breathing advertising for a living, we have a pretty low tolerance for blatant sales plugs and content marketing spam like on some other subs.

[+] Adutude|9 years ago|reply
In my opinion there isn't anything about Reddit that is like HN. It's why I stopped reading Reddit and came here. Too many haters and trolls on Reddit.
[+] dorianm|9 years ago|reply
There is https://lobste.rs which is great (not a subreddit but it's very similar)
[+] Rudism|9 years ago|reply
I found Lobsters some time ago through my blog analytics when one of my posts got some traffic from there. Reached out to my (limited) personal network in the tech sphere to see if I could land an invite, but nobody had ever heard of it. Didn't feel comfortable messaging random users for one, so I gave up. If anyone is monitoring this thread and sending invites, I'd love to have one.
[+] eecks|9 years ago|reply
The top post has 43 points and the rest average around 10. Is it safe to say that not a lot of people use the site?
[+] hga|9 years ago|reply
Signup by invitation only, and having retired before it started I don't know anyone in it who I would feel comfortable asking for one.
[+] new299|9 years ago|reply
Is there anywhere that covers technology/scientific development well? (Non-software).

I'm always looking for those kinds of things (new sensor, scientific methods, medical advances). But have never found a good forum for this.

[+] MaxLeiter|9 years ago|reply
/r/futurology, also /r/science
[+] ebbv|9 years ago|reply
Literally nothing. Reddit is a cesspool and especially when it comes to technical topics it is absolutely abysmal. Most of the people spouting off opinions about technical topics on Reddit are totally unqualified to do so. People who work as cashiers at Taco Bell writing diatribes about Ruby vs PHP, etc.
[+] bb6xt|9 years ago|reply
Quite contrary to what you've written I find the Haskell subredit very useful. The comments are usually well thought out and relevant. I daresay the people on the Haskell subredit are the smartest and most helpful of any subredit I've been on.
[+] sotojuan|9 years ago|reply
Is HN and the Twitter/Medium/blog spehere different? We get devs with 0-3 years experience and no desire to look into past art writing with an authoritative tone all the time.
[+] kLeeIsDead|9 years ago|reply
Unfortunately the same thing could be said about this site as of late. There are still some knowledgeable people here, but it appears eternal September has hit.
[+] wyldfire|9 years ago|reply
What are the qualifications for having an opinion on a technical topic? Ever since Reddit introduced subreddits, it has become a very dynamic place. Many moderators cultivate behavior similar to how it's done here on HN. Lots of subreddits are gems of community and threads like this are a great way to index those valuable parts.
[+] samsolomon|9 years ago|reply
Not a sub, but I'm a big fan of Designer News. I've been a daily visitor for the last 3 years. While it's more design-focused, many Users are UI Designers, Product Designers and people working in tech.

https://www.designernews.co/

[+] misotaur|9 years ago|reply
/r/truereddit Just interesting stories and essays,a lot like HN but slower(and no show my program threads)
[+] jacques_chester|9 years ago|reply
r/TrueReddit is the audition for HN and vice versa. Folks wanting to eke out karma arbitrage can just copy and paste between them, they track each other with about 12-24 hours lag.
[+] tnone|9 years ago|reply
Unfortunately that sub is as politically left as it can get. Downvotes galore if you dare to disagree with the agenda of identity politics.

Best part: they upvoted and agreed with NPR that lefties are impervious to fake news and can quickly spot it because of their superior reasoning skills.

[+] FT_intern|9 years ago|reply
I dislike it because it is almost all politics discussion with many toxic posters. And they upvote snarky one line responses while downvoting anything that is remotely on the right as the other poster wrote.

It is basically a slightly more civil /r/politics with news stories only.

[+] danso|9 years ago|reply
I rarely read r/programming any more, its content rules seeming so arbitrary. My favorites are:

- r/python

- r/reverseengineering

- r/netsec

- r/shittykickstarters (to read debunkings of why a Kickstarter is scientifically/technically unfeasible)

[+] germ|9 years ago|reply
/g/ and /prog/ can be useful. There's tons of noise and beginner/toy threads, but competent devs can be found.

Can't speak for the other chans but I recall a chan with a competent user base dedicated to programming/hacking/rigbuilding a few years back. 1337chan or something? Abused the green on black theme if anyone else remembers.

[+] Inconel|9 years ago|reply
I wouldn't say these are comparable to HN but r/cableporn and r/welding might be interesting to HN posters.
[+] hirzel|9 years ago|reply
I also have a soft spot for subs that reveal high craft in unexpected places. r/conduitporn is also on this list.
[+] stared|9 years ago|reply
[+] saosebastiao|9 years ago|reply
Meh, it's alright. I've found it to be completely dominated by people who are only interested in or talk about deep neural nets. That's fine I guess, it's certainly popular. But there are vast areas of applied machine learning that rightly use other techniques (deep learning isn't AGI!) and it's really frustrating to try to ask questions about RF Tree Pruning or SVM kernel functions only to get a bunch of vacuous "you should try deep learning" comments.
[+] charlieirish|9 years ago|reply
https://barnacl.es/ (Barnacles) is a ~strong~ young community of tech-related news with emphasis on bootstrapping and launching products.
[+] alexdumitru|9 years ago|reply
It doesn't look that strong to me. There aren't any comments and I guess there aren't more than a few active users.
[+] superflyguy|9 years ago|reply
I think the request was for subreddits though.
[+] spacehacker|9 years ago|reply