And in the age of artificial intelligence, a lot of problems require a combination of the works of machines and humans. Google can't provide a professional and insightful knowledge structure on its own. But more documents like this one maybe will help a new class of smarter production. Actually I myself am working on the similar production.
Additionally, unlike many extra-long "awesome list", I just pick one or a few links for each nested "category" which are the most mainstream and not outdated, based on the clear trends, public data, and experience. They are not trivial collections.
I also have a more specifically-targeted list of links for React, Redux, and related topics like ES6, functional programming, and Webpack, at https://github.com/markerikson/react-redux-links . Specifically intended to be a great starting point for anyone trying to learn the ecosystem, as well as a solid source of good info on more advanced topics. The front page of my list has a "best-of / getting started" subset of links, and then the rest of the repo is grouped by topic.
What the idea behind of that? Are you using all this tools, services or whatever? And how do you manage to stay up to date on such a wide area of stuff?
> @acemarke your react-redux-links repo is a godsend. how do you keep up with all the articles that the community puts out?
My reply:
> Wayyyyyy too much time spent reading, bookmarking, and organizing :) The "to add" queue has been bouncing between 100-200 items lately. Comments like yours definitely encourage me to keep up with it, though :) As I've said, 1-man project, would love help, but don't expect it.