I’ve been ignorant of reddit since it’s inception, but recently I’ve discovered that technologists do make good use of it.<p>Are there complimentary websites out there that might give more insight into tech or even just generally popular subreddits? Apart from searching for a specific subreddit by name, I can’t seem to find any useful list of tech topics or subcategories etc.<p>Please post any useful complimentary websites you use to help explore reddit. Thanks.
You might find the 'multireddit' functionality useful - it combines multiple user-defined subreddits in to a single 'front page' to browse. For example, I follow the 'it_resources' multireddit created by another user - <a href="https://www.reddit.com/user/neztach/m/it_resources/" rel="nofollow">https://www.reddit.com/user/neztach/m/it_resources/</a> . It's a useful combination of a lot of IT related subreddits across multiple areas - from networking, to system administration, to security etc. Of course, the challenge is finding suitable multireddits in the first place - /r/multihub contains lists of them, you might find it useful to have a look on there and sort by 'top', or to run a search on that subreddit for a term and sort by top.<p>The other strategy I can recommend is looking at related subreddits. So if you stumble across a 'good' subreddit that's interesting to you, have a look in the sidebar and see what other subreddits are suggested by the moderators of that subreddit. I find that to be a great way to find high quality related subreddits either with a narrower focus or just on generally related topic. For example, the /r/homelab subreddit recommends /r/networking, /r/sysadmin, /r/datacenter etc...