Maria Chen
@mariachen · 2h ago
Just open-sourced our internal design system built with Tailwind + Radix. 40+ components, fully accessible. Check it out!
A platform where code meets community. Projects, feed, chats, courses and events — in a single workspace.
5,000+
Developers
1,200+
Projects
300+
Communities
40+
Countries
Stop switching between GitHub, Slack, Discord, and Eventbrite. Synora brings it together.
Create projects with kanban boards, tasks, and progress tracking. Work with your team in real time — like GitHub, but simpler.
Posts, discussions, wins — a feed for developers, not influencers.
Create and join thematic communities. Share knowledge, mentor newcomers, grow together.
Organize conferences, workshops and meetups. Plan events, stream talks, build a learning culture.
A feed built for sharing knowledge, not chasing likes.
Maria Chen
@mariachen · 2h ago
Just open-sourced our internal design system built with Tailwind + Radix. 40+ components, fully accessible. Check it out!
Dev Patel
@devpatel · 5h ago
TIL: You can use Rust's pattern matching to handle 15 error variants in a single match block. Clean, readable, no more nested ifs.
Sophie Kuznetsova
@sophiek · 8h ago
Our team just shipped real-time collaboration for our kanban boards. WebSockets + CRDT = magic. Wrote a deep-dive blog post about the architecture.
From solo side projects to university communities — one platform, every workflow.
Track side projects with a kanban board, publish progress posts, grow your reputation, and build in public. No team required.
12
Projects
48
Posts
1,240
Reputation
Hundreds of developers use Synora daily — here's what they think.
Finally a place where I can manage projects AND talk to my team without jumping between 5 apps.
Alex K.
Full-stack developer
We moved our entire CS community here. The events calendar and community feed replaced our Telegram + Google Calendar setup.
Maria S.
Community lead, DevConnect
The reputation system keeps me motivated. Seeing my level grow as I contribute actually makes me ship more.
Ivan P.
Open-source contributor
Synora is the first platform where my junior devs can ask questions, follow senior devs, and actually learn in context.
Sarah L.
Engineering manager
I found my co-founder here. Posted about my side project, got a DM, and now we've shipped v1.
Andrei M.
Indie hacker
The kanban + team chat integration is exactly what small OSS projects need. No Jira, no Slack bill.
Priya T.
OSS maintainer
Stop stitching five tools together. See what you get in one place.
| Synora★ | GitHub | Discord | Dev.to | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Developer social feed | ||||
| Realtime team chat | ||||
| Project management | ||||
| Communities & spaces | ||||
| Events & calendar | ||||
| Courses & learning | ||||
| Reputation system | ||||
| Job board |
No credit card required. Upgrade or downgrade anytime.
Everything you need to get started
For serious developers and creators
Built for teams that ship together
Enterprise-grade for growing companies
Everything you might want to know — about the platform, communities, pricing, security, and what we're building next.
Synora is a hybrid platform for developers — combining project collaboration (like GitHub), a social feed (like Dev.to), realtime chat (like Slack), and learning communities (like ВК-style spaces). Everything lives in one place: your code, your conversations, and your growth.
Developers at any stage — students learning to code, indie hackers shipping side projects, open-source maintainers, IT communities running courses, and teams who want lightweight project management without enterprise bloat.
Yes — the core platform is free forever: profiles, projects, chats, posts, communities. Paid tiers unlock larger storage, advanced analytics, and tools for community admins running courses at scale.
The interface is currently available in English and Russian, with more locales planned. Content is unrestricted — write posts and run courses in any language.
Each project has a kanban board, tasks, members with roles (owner / maintainer / member / viewer), tags, a built-in chat, and stars. You can keep it private to your team or publish it to the public feed.
Synora projects focus on the human side of building — discussion, planning, members, learning. Code itself stays in your existing Git host (GitHub, GitLab, self-hosted). We link to it; we don't replace it.
Yes. Use invite links from any project — recipients land on a preview page, can accept, and join after a quick sign-up. Roles are picked up automatically from the invite.
Tasks have status, priority, assignees, due dates, and story points. Your dashboard surfaces upcoming deadlines, overdue work, and active projects — across every team you belong to.
A space owned by a group — for example a university CS club, a regional dev meetup, or an OSS project's contributor circle. Communities have their own feed, members, events, and (optionally) courses.
Anyone can create a community from the Communities page. Joining is one click — public communities are open, private ones require approval from a moderator.
Yes. Use the calendar to schedule meetups, talks, workshops, AMAs. Members get notified, RSVP, and the event surfaces in the community feed and on personal calendars.
It helps you draft posts, summarize long threads, suggest tags, answer questions about projects you're a member of, and surface insights on your dashboard ("you haven't posted this week", "3 tasks are overdue").
Only the content you explicitly share with it inside a chat session, and only your own data — your posts, your tasks, your messages. It never trains on your data and never sees other users' private content.
We use Anthropic's Claude family for generation and reasoning. The exact model rotates with the latest stable release.
Communities can publish full courses — modules, lessons (text / video / interactive), assignments, and progress tracking. Students enroll, learn at their pace, and discuss in the community feed.
Yes — paid courses are supported via Synora's subscriptions and one-time purchases. Synora handles billing; the community keeps the majority of revenue.
Course authors can issue verifiable certificates of completion that show up on the student's profile and can be shared externally.
You earn points for valuable activity — getting likes on a post, having a comment marked helpful, completing a project task, mentoring someone, or hitting milestones. Points unlock career levels: Newcomer → Contributor → Active → Maintainer → Expert → Master.
Achievements are one-off badges (first post, ten followers, first project, 1k reputation, etc.) that pin to your profile. They're cosmetic but visible — a quick way for others to read your history.
Most points are permanent. Reputation can only decrease through moderation actions (e.g. a deleted post that violated community rules).
All traffic is HTTPS-only. Passwords are stored as bcrypt hashes (strength 12). Auth uses short-lived JWT access tokens (15 min) with rotating refresh tokens (7 days). Sessions are revocable from your settings.
Yes. Account deletion is self-service from settings — your profile, posts, and messages are permanently removed within 30 days. Anonymized contributions to public threads are kept where required to preserve conversation context.
Two-factor auth via TOTP and security keys (WebAuthn) is on the near-term roadmap. GitHub and Google OAuth are available today as a strong alternative.
Every post, comment, and profile has a Report button. Reports go to a moderation queue handled by community admins or platform staff for cross-community issues. Repeat offenders are rate-limited or banned.
Unlimited public projects, unlimited posts, unlimited 1:1 and group chats, community membership, full access to public courses, basic AI Assistant usage.
Pro: more storage, larger AI Assistant context, advanced profile analytics. Team: shared billing, private communities at scale, audit logs. Community: revenue tools, course analytics, custom branding.
Yes — cancel from the billing page. Your tier stays active until the end of the current period; no prorated refunds, no questions asked.
Three ways today: paid courses, paid community memberships, and tip jars on your profile. Sponsorships and creator marketplaces are on the roadmap.
Synora keeps a small platform fee on paid transactions to cover billing and infrastructure. Creators receive the majority share — exact percentages are listed on the billing page.
Payouts run monthly to a connected bank or payment account, in the currency you choose. Minimum payout threshold and supported countries are documented in settings.
GitHub (link repos to projects, sync issues), Google / GitHub OAuth for sign-in, S3-compatible storage for files, calendar export (.ics). Slack, Discord, GitLab, and Linear are planned.
Yes — every endpoint the web app uses is part of a documented REST API (Swagger UI is published at /api-docs). Personal access tokens are coming so you can script against your own data.
The codebase is built to run as Docker Compose (Postgres + Redis + MinIO + backend + frontend + nginx). A self-host guide is in the roadmap; for now, see the README in the repo.
Expanded AI Assistant (project-aware Q&A, proactive insights), course platform v1, mobile apps (iOS + Android), 2FA, payouts in more currencies, public marketplace for templates and snippets.
Vote on the public roadmap board, post feature requests with the #feature-request tag, or join the Synora community on the platform itself. Top-voted requests inform every quarterly plan.
Backend deploys weekly, frontend daily. Major features land monthly. Status and changelog are on the public roadmap page.
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