Unveiling the All-New Tuts+ Hub

Unveiling the All-New Tuts+ Hub

Over the past few weeks, we’ve been working hard behind the scenes to create a central place for our Tuts+ readers to call “home”. Somewhere that shows you the latest content from across all our sites, allows you to filter only those tutorials that interest you, and shares a few statistics about the Tuts+ network.

Today, we’re very excited to introduce the Tuts+ Hub — read on to find out more about it!


All Our Latest Tutorials in One Place

The Tuts+ Hub is a new way to see all the latest content across our whole network. Any new tutorials that have been published since your last visit will be given a “New” banner, and you can quickly filter out the sites that don’t interest you — just toggle the checkboxes at the top of the screen to show/hide content for each site.

Tuts+ Hub

We’re also showcasing all our new Tuts+ Premium tutorials — these are shown with a yellow border, so it’s worth keeping an eye out for these if you’re one of our awesome Tuts+ Premium members!


A Handful of Statistics

We also thought it would be fun to share a few of our statistics with you. Did you know we’ve published over 11,500 tutorials? Or that we’re approaching half a million comments across the network? It’s a fun way to keep an eye on how Tuts+ is growing (and these stats are updated every day).

Tuts+ Hub

What Do You Think?

I’d love to hear your feedback on Tuts+ Hub, and any thoughts or comments on what works well/what you’d like to see improved. We’re really happy with how the project turned out and I think you’re going to love it!

Thanks for being one of our readers and, if you’ve somehow resisted all the way down to this point, head over and check out the Tuts+ Hub!

David Appleyard is davidappleyard on Themeforest
Note: Want to add some source code? Type <pre><code> before it and </code></pre> after it. Find out more
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  • http://georgedina.ro George Dina

    This tuts network is quite big, a hub like this was necessary.
    Hey, nice ASCII art there (Tuts + Hub = Rocks) :) – you know what I mean.

    I don’t see an RSS feed there.

  • Valstorm

    I love the idea of bringing back the portal / hub page, it’s a necessity when considering the vast quantity of tutorials and articles available on the network – It’s long overdue.

    I do have a little criticism on the design of the hub page though, the thumbnails are too large in my opinion, do they need to be so big for this kind of archive page? I also feel that the icons/badges attached to the thumbnails, that are used to differentiate the sub sections of the tuts sites, are quite vague – your users would have an easier time finding their filtered content if the posts were separated into sections or categories for each sub domain on the tuts network. It would also be helpful if these posts were dated in some way.

    Thanks for bringing back the hub, it should be much easier finding what’s new and relevant.

  • Chuck

    Great, it was missing since that tuts+premium took the http://www.tutsplus.com domain.

  • vdubplate@gmail.com

    The old drop down worked great

  • Pitt

    Couldn’t watch your Hub page. It seems that it requires JavaScript to work. But I don’t activate JavaScript to get some “maybe” information. This is not my understanding of accessible web design. In my understanding client side code in an uncontrolled environment should be reduced to the bare minimum and it should always be optional (especially on a web page, so central for my business). So is it my problem? No, this is yours.

    Sorry,

    Pitt

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