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I am looking for good programming people to follow on Twitter. What are your suggestions?

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13 Answers

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A long-ish list of people I enjoy, in no particular order:

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Jon Skeet

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100 technology experts on Twitter

http://blogs.zdnet.com/BTL/?p=22754

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Okay. May be you don't like all of them. Follow catswhocode, codepo8, mager. They are all good. – vinaynag Aug 28 at 8:01
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Do you want to follow me ;)

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It says 404 -_- dude – Koning Baard XIV Aug 20 at 20:13
i think its meant to be twitter.com/reboltutorial – John Nolan Aug 20 at 21:54
Yeah, thanks for fixing :) – Rebol Tutorial Aug 21 at 10:39
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#followfriday :-)

@codemonkeyism @codinghorror @dnene @elijahmanor @gvanrossum @jeffbarr @jeffpatton @jurgenappelo @mfeathers @robdiana @shanselman @spolsky @testobsessed @unclebobmartin

This is not a complete list of programmers and software experts I follow, but they are all well known and I hope this list is helpful to you.

I think following these people on Twitter and following their blogs via RSS don't need to be mutually exclusive activities; they can complement each other nicely.

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Most sites will have a twitter account or bot that posts links to their site when a new article is posted, some of these can be quite nice to follow. I even wrote a program to aggregate RSS feeds and then tweet when new articles arrived, case in point @stackalert.

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i just started on twitter, and am still getting the hang of how not to be boring on it ;-)

nov8r on twitter

and of course, it is mandatory to follow Jon Skeet, even though he doesn't say much

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I twitter, mostly about my development of JUnitMax. My creatively named account: http://twitter.com/KentBeck

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kent, what the heck is junitmax? even google doesn't know... – Steven A. Lowe Jan 6 at 19:19
Steven: threeriversinstitute.org/junitmax/subscribe.html/… "an Eclipse plug-in to improve developer test, is in paid beta test." – dbr Aug 31 at 0:03
JUnit Max was a continuous testing plugin for Eclipse. After each file save it ran all the tests for the affected project (and all its dependent projects), ran them most-likely-to-fail-first, and showed the results in the source code. While a great tool to use for me, it was a business failure and I cancelled it after seven months. – Kent Beck Oct 15 at 16:15
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Jurgen Appelo recently created this list: Top 50 Twitterers to Follow for Developers.

Now perhaps somebody could help me with my question, what exactly is the point of Twitter?

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that's a pretty philosophical question. It's a site that performs a simple service very well, and people use it, presumably for a whole host of reasons. I use it to track my day. – Ben Aston Dec 5 '08 at 13:28
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I follow these guys:

There is a comforting aspect in reading tweets of these people: you see that you're not the only one with seemingly trivial problems... ;-)

Edit: There is dvlprs.com, a site which shows live tweets from "celebrity" programmers.

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Even good programming people - such as Scott Hanselman and Phil Haack in the Windows/ .NET world - tend to post a lot of personal/ non programming stuff on twitter. I'd recommend choosing an RSS reader and following their blogs instead.

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Agreed Jeff Atwood's is so full of YouTube and Rock Band links, that I won't click on his links in work. – John Nolan Oct 10 '08 at 11:56
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i agree, if you're purely looking for programming related stuff go for the RSS feeds since twitter has very low signal-to-noise ratio – jesal Apr 20 at 21:21
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There is a list in this question.

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Yeah that's what prompted me to ask the question. – John Nolan Oct 10 '08 at 11:54

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