The same about all the stuff regarding equity and stock options. Currently looks like a list about what every web developer that works for funded startups should know.
I find that learning how to work with list is like having a crescent wrench in your tool box. Not every tool box have one but I sure think they should.
If you don't know list you won't know when that is the right solution. I have seen many people just use a SQLite DB for something as simple as a 20 item list.
>These are resources I can recommend to every programmer regardless of their skill level or tech stack
> Highly opinionated . Not backed by science.
This kind of indicated that to me, at least. Also the format of the title is just inherently daft and a rhetorical device that summarizes the kind of list it is. Like "things to do before you die", or "ten things you won't believe Michael Jordan sat on".
We all have our own version of this list in our heads. This person just published theirs.
Also it says:
>P.S. You don't need to know all of that by heart to be a programmer.
But knowing the stuff will help you become better!
SEO is largely about understanding how people think and phrase their questions. If you're ever going to write something and want other people to read it, they typically have to find it first.
Even if the person has already found your project or your docs, following SEO principles will make them easier to navigate.
Here I'm referring to the "stuff people type into search boxes" aspect of SEO, not the "dirty tricks" aspect.