Developer Communities More Vital Than Ever, MLH CEO Declares After DEV Acquisition
In a major shakeup for the developer ecosystem, Major League Hacking (MLH) has acquired the popular developer platform DEV, signaling a renewed emphasis on community-driven coding knowledge sharing in an era increasingly dominated by AI tools.
Mike Swift, co-founder and CEO of MLH, says the acquisition is not about consolidation but about survival. 'The need for authentic developer communities has never been greater,' Swift said in an exclusive interview. 'AI can generate code, but it can't replicate the shared learning, mentorship, and human connection that platforms like DEV provide.'
Background
MLH, best known for organizing the world's largest hackathon community, has long championed entry-level pathways into programming. DEV, a social platform for software developers with over a million monthly active users, has been a hub for tutorials, discussions, and open-source collaboration.

The acquisition merges MLH's hands-on, event-driven model with DEV's publication ecosystem. 'We're creating a unified space where developers can learn, build, and publish — all in one place,' Swift explained. 'This is about breaking down silos between learning and doing.'

What This Means
For aspiring developers, the merger promises a seamless transition from hackathon participation to long-term community engagement. For seasoned professionals, it means a consolidated resource for both technical content and networking.
Swift argues that AI tools — far from making human developers obsolete — actually amplify the need for strong communities. 'Now is the best time to be both an artisan and a builder,' he said. 'You can use AI to automate the mundane, but you still need a community to help you craft something meaningful.'
The timing of the acquisition is critical: with generative AI reshaping how code is written, developer platforms are racing to stay relevant. Yet Swift remains bullish. 'Communities aren't just nice-to-haves. They're the infrastructure that makes development human,' he added.
Learn more about MLH and DEV's history — or jump to how this affects your daily coding workflow.
Related Articles
- Hugging Face Opens Digital Storefront for Reachy Mini Robot: Over 200 Community Apps Now Available
- Balancing Observability and Human Intuition in the Age of AI-Driven Development
- Braintrust Breach: What AI Developers Need to Know About API Key Security
- Beyond RAG: How Structured Memory Unlocks Reliable Enterprise AI Agents
- How to Build Unshakeable Customer Loyalty with a Deliberately Inefficient Personal Touch
- Why I Ditched My Android Phone for an iPod to Listen to Music
- Boards Are Betting Big on AI – But Their Networks Are Stuck in the Past
- From Basement to Global: How Runpod Built a Cloud with Community Backing