What kind of dev content do Indian developers actually find useful (or want) in 2026?
Posted by Intangible-AI@reddit | learnprogramming | View on Reddit | 3 comments
Hey folks, working dev here. I’ve been thinking about putting together free tutorial content because honestly most YouTube content for Indian devs feels stuck in 2019: endless DSA grind videos, surface-level MERN tutorials, and “crack FAANG in 30 days” stuff.
Before I waste time making something nobody wants, I’d love your input. If you had to pick ONE area/topic where current content genuinely sucks and you’d actually watch better material, what would it be?
- 2026 level in depth (including modern topics) CSE Core subjects (DBMS, Networking, OS etc)
- Non-cliche LLD videos (not talking about elevator design and atm machine design but actual 2026 questions)
- Ai Engineering (2026 content. Far beyond typical chunking and vector dbs. Actual optimisation and interview questions)
- Course on AWS Certified Developer Associate certification
- Modern day DSA in TS, Go with full playlists starting from level 0 upto advanced topics like DP in trees.
- Full fledged backend development in Go & gin.
- Something else (write in comments).
What’s the topic you wish someone explained properly without the hype?
StoneCypher@reddit
this has nothing to do with learning programming
the spam in here has gotten so bad
brotherman555@reddit
how to poop in the river
Fun_Tradition_6905@reddit
Used to be stationed overseas and river situation was... different there. You learn real quick that proper squat technique matters way more than people think, and timing with current flow is actually crucial for hygiene reasons. Most important thing is having something to clean with afterward because leaves aren't always reliable option. Also learned that upstream/downstream awareness isn't just about being polite to other people - it's about not creating problems for yourself later when you need water for other things
But seriously though, option 6 sounds pretty solid since Go backend stuff seems to be getting more popular in Indian tech scene from what I've seen