Nanocoder hit 2,000 GitHub stars 🌟 #50
will-lamerton
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Nanocoder just crossed 2,000 GitHub stars. We launched just under a year ago, so this feels like a reasonable moment to step back and say thank you, and to explain briefly why we think this matters beyond the vanity metric.
The numbers
We know what we are. We're a small, volunteer-led collective building tools we believe in. The numbers aren't impressive by the standards of VC-backed projects, and we don't want to compare ourselves to them. They're impressive by the standards of a community that started from zero and kept going.
What the stars actually mean
GitHub stars are not a perfect signal of anything. But they do mean someone found the project interesting enough to bookmark it, and that matters more than it sounds like it should. In open-source, most people who use a tool never interact with its community. The ones who star it are the ones who felt enough of a connection to register that they cared.
That registration is what keeps a project alive. Not the number itself, but the signal it sends: people are paying attention, and they want to see where this goes.
The community
Nanocoder is built by the Nano Collective, a community-led group of developers, designers, and maintainers building open-source AI tools for the people who use them. We build not for profit, but for the community. Everything we produce is open, transparent, and shaped by the people who rely on it.
The principles behind that work are privacy-respecting, local-first, and open for all. Nanocoder runs on your machine, with no cloud dependency, no account required, and no data leaving your environment. That's not a feature we added later, it's the entire reason the project exists.
The contributors who've shown up over the past year have shaped those principles in practice. They've filed bugs that made the tool better, opened PRs that shipped real improvements, and provided feedback that kept us honest about what we were building. That work is what the stars represent.
What's next
We don't have a roadmap post ready today. What we have is a core team that's growing, a contributor community that's engaged, and a set of principles that aren't going to change.
If you want to follow along, the best places are:
If you want to get involved, every project has a
CONTRIBUTING.mdwith setup instructions. Look for issues taggedgood first issueif you're not sure where to start.Thank you for being part of this.
Will and the Nanocoder core team
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