I'm baffled. A random list that links to a few most-starred node app got 50+ upvotes in 2 hours on HN and is currently No.1. First commit 3 days ago. I fail to see how it's awesome.
It feels like this and the numerous other "awesome" lists which claim to be curated, are curated in only the most trivial sense: perhaps someone looked to see if each new entry in some plausible way is in the right general category of thing, i.e. is not a random unrelated link. For example, this one looks like a list of open source applications that could be found or were submitted so far for inclusion.
I don't see any evidence on this one or any other of any genuine curation, which would be characterized by saying "no" to some of the possible candidates.
Unfortunately the words awesome and curation have so little meaning among lists of programming-related things, that it would probably be a waste of time for someone to actually do that, and would possibly generate hard feelings from whatever projects end up in the "no" pile.
I always wonder what gives authors of these curated lists the authority to be curators? Are they like, experts in the specific domain? What is the curation process? It's difficult to take them seriously unless these questions are answered.
Why does their need to be an authority? If somebody posts a bad list or curates against your interests, you could leave a comment or suggest a better list.
I think it's just people who use the upvote button as a "save for later" functionality. Also, if it's on the front page it might get the boost to make it really useful.
I was wondering that too. Either someone figured out how to game the HN algorithm, or the term "curated list" really does have some magic clickbait properties…
That's basically how the whole javascript community works. There are tons of lists with random links (usually most-starred, yeah), which doesn't make a lot of sense, but they have tons of stars and attention.
Do they help people? Yeah, some of them definitely. Are they awesome and must have to get familiar with? Barely.
From my short experience working with other communities is very different, they are much more pragmatic and sceptical (worked with Go and Elixir a little bit).
Anyone enlighten me?