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Looking back on a wonderful year for dev.to

Ben Halpern on December 31, 2017

On January 3rd dev.to turns 2 years old. But it was 2017 when Jess and I took the plunge and began working on it full time, with Peter joining as t...
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Ben Halpern

Personally I hope to communicate better in 2018. In my code, and in everything else. I'm sometimes lost in my own world and do a bad job getting on the same page with my partners @jess and @peter and the team. In 2018 as we expand and grow in many ways, communication is number one.

When I say "in my code", I'm very hopeful. I've improved a lot in that area lately and am coming into my own.

Another goal is absolutely to read more. I'm currently catching up on some coding books I've seen recommended a million times and I'm finally getting to them. I also want to do a better job this year of reading dev.to posts with great care. I sometimes do a lot of skimming, but when I read with attentiveness, I learn so much from the content on this site and I can learn even more if I take the time to read with intent.

One more anecdote that I forgot to put in the post: When Jess mentioned in our newsletter that she was headed to Patagonia, Chile over the holidays, several community members from the area reached out to offer advice or if she was going to be around to meet up. It's so touching to receive such kindness from the devs, and awesome to see that this community has folks from every corner of the globe.

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Arden de Raaij

Don't forget to read some 'fun' books as well!

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Jason C. McDonald

Is "Dreaming in Code" on that list? It's a lot of fun, and very insightful into why software is so broken so often. :)

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Damien Cosset

How appropriate, I'm wearing my black DEV shirt to write this. My discovery of dev.to in April has been by far the best moment of my young developer career. I feel like finding a safe place to grow is challenging those days. Here, we are able to express whatever opinions, feelings and knowledge we have safely.

Being part of a community that values respect and solidarity above all else is precious. If there is one thing we must keep, it is that one. No more am I afraid of posting a article explaining a concept I learned or expressing a opinion, because right or wrong, I'll know the responses will be constructive.

We all wish the dev.to team good luck for 2018. It seems like you have a lot of things in store for us. We will patiently wait and assist whenever we can. I think I can speak for everyone when I say you can be very proud of the work you've done here.

Cheers!

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Ben Halpern

Heck yes

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Arden de Raaij

This is really nice to read! I'm not sure how I stumbled upon dev.to last year. I think it were the funny dev book covers on Twitter that led me to following the account. Along the way I saw that there was a website tied in, and it seemed like a nice place to post everything develop related. As I mentioned in a post earlier, I kind of missed a place like this. It used to be Medium, but I'm not sure what Medium is anymore and it just feels my stories get lost out there. Thanks to you guys some of my articles had tremendous reach and it's really encouraging to see such results and support when blogging for the first time in a long while again. For that I say thank you!

Wishing you all the best for 2018 🍾

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rhymes

I'm so happy to be here.

I can't wait for another year of positivity and awesomeness by and with this community.

Thank you Ben, Jess and Peter!

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Shannon Crabill

Happy (almost) Birthday to dev.to! Here's to many more!

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NetBzz

That tweet is what brought me here and the wide range of content is what made me stay.

This community feed was exactly what I've been looking for. I hope it'll become my/the main dev hub in 2018, because at some point consuming becomes too much of a pain and can get annoying. Think of all those twitter lists, multi Reddits, newsletters and podcasts.

It's always exciting to be part of a newer, growing community. It makes contributing 'easier' and more 'fulfilling' as you're closer to the core.

Personally I haven't contributed yet, but in due time I'm sure that I will.

The platform invokes a sense of feel-good and camaraderie that I haven't experienced elsewhere. It makes you want to get involved.

Keep on keeping on!

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Jen Chan

Hi all, I became more aware there was a dev.to site after searching where those “copy and paste from stack overflow” Tees came from. Can I get one of those or will you bring that back? I so related to that as an amateur starter.

It’s been a pleasure to have this site as a resource and I really like the smaller community with people from all skill levels. A lot of the posts are easy to read and feedback has been super welcoming and amazingly fast. Oh yeah one problem I do have is that since getting an account through twitter, is that I can’t change my personal details on my profile at all (would like to stop being called “fake Jen Chan” hahaa)

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Ben Halpern

Hey sorry about the issue with your account. It should work now.

Glad you're liking it here Jen. 🦄

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Jen Chan

Yay thanks a lot!

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K

joining as founder after the founding? xD

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Jason C. McDonald

This place is truly special. It's my favorite coding-related site on the entire interwebs, bar none!