Our logo design contest has ended.
The winning design is from Peter Borlace, aka pb_design.

There were a whopping 253 entries in the contest; thanks to everyone who participated for your hard work. As a little bonus, Leon Bambrick has graciously offered up free licenses to his excellent TimeSnapper software to the following runners-up:



There were many excellent entries, but it came down to a difficult decision between these four which we felt best captured the intent of stackoverflow.com.
I’ll be awarding the $29 prize to Peter first thing tomorrow. Congratulations!
This is the third episode of the StackOverflow podcast, wherein Joel and I discuss the following:
- A brief, but awesome, reference to Donald Gibb in Revenge of the Nerds.
- We are now using Skype and Pamela to record our podcast for higher quality.
- Joel’s original 2002 Recommended Programmer Reading list and Jeff’s Top 5 Programming Books — and why stackoverflow.com will complement, not replace, these kinds of books.
- The ineffable Steve Yegge, and a digression on the philosophy of Apple and Microsoft font rendering strategies.
- Confirming that stackoverflow.com will be as language agnostic as we can make it. It is for programming questions, whatever the language and platform. Yes, it’s true that Joel and I have a Microsoft background, but we respect that programming is far larger than Microsoft.
- Why You Should Learn C (again).
- On our technology stack: stackoverflow.com will be built in ASP.NET running on our dedicated Windows Server 2008 x64 box — but that doesn’t mean stackoverflow.com, the site, will be about ASP.NET!
- On jumping the shark.
- An extended examination of everyone’s favorite language: Wasabi! Along with some reasons why you might actually want to build your own DSL and compiler.
- A discussion of our logo contest at 99designs.com.
- What, exactly, is a stack overflow?
We also answered the following listener questions, with a lot of peripheral discussion on related topics:
- Dave Kauffman: On Computer Science versus Software Engineering: is there any real-world use for recursion?
- Nick Malaguti: How should he deal with real world programming projects as a part of college classes? Specifically, the fact that there’s no real hierarchy and an inability to move the deadline? Also, what software do you recommend to manage software projects? (Joel swears that Nick was not paid to ask this question, in case you were wondering.)
- David Alison: What do we think of services like the Google App Engine?
- Tim Patterson: How to use blogtalkradio.com to easily record a question for stackoverflow using nothing but your telephone and a web browser.
If you’d like to submit a question to be answered in our next episode,
record an audio file (90 seconds or less) and mail it to podcast@stackoverflow.com.
The transcript wiki for this episode is available for public editing.
I’ve been hosting codinghorror.com at CrystalTech on a dedicated server for about six months now, and I’ve been quite happy with the performance and availability. Any downtime has been completely my fault, and they’ve been responsive the few times I’ve requested support.
So when we needed a beefy dedicated server to host stackoverflow.com, I naturally turned to CrystalTech again.
Here are the specifications for what will eventually become the dedicated stackoverflow.com server:
- Windows Server 2008 Standard Edition x64
- Dual Quad-Core Xeon E5320 (1.8 GHz)
- 4 GB RAM
- 271GB SAS hard drive
It’s amazing how cheap server hardware has gotten.

I’m hoping we won’t run into scaling problems anytime soon with this dedicated server. As Ted Dziuba succinctly points out, scalability is usually the least of most startups’ worries.
The name stackoverflow.com was partially chosen by the community, with stackoverflow.com winning by a virtual landslide.
But websites can’t survive on name alone. We also need a logo. A logo with verve. With zazz. With moxie! A dynamic logo that reflects the potential of this mythical programming community site we’re building.
Rather than try out my anemic design skills — it’s always dangerous when programmers start thinking they’re designers — I thought I’d put the logo design to the community in similar fashion. We have a stackoverflow.com logo design contest at 99 designs, with a prize of $29 at stake.
I’ve been quite impressed by many of the submissions so far. The contest runs for another five days, so if you’re interested, please submit a logo!
This is the second episode of the StackOverflow podcast, wherein Joel and I discuss the following:
- Why have a podcast at all? What’s the point?
- A discussion about some the podcasts Joel listens to: John Dvorak, Adam Curry.
- StackOverflow podcast transcription wiki courtesy of FogBugz
- New RSS feed at blog.stackoverflow.com, with podcast specific RSS feed courtesy of podpress.
- Podcast feed submitted at iTunes, PodCast Alley, Yahoo Podcasts and Podcast Ready.
- Sound quality concerns (we’re working on it).
- Why we require audio submissions for questions.
We also answered the following listener questions, with a lot of peripheral discussion on related topics:
- Nathan Stohlmann: How do we plan to keep religious discussions from happening on stackoverflow? will we provide a way to show implementations in multiple languages?
- Matt Youell: How will we handle spam or reblogged content from stackoverflow? What about licensing issues with user-generated content?
- Andrew Davis: How will we prevent stackoverflow quality from diminishing over time as the site becomes more popular?
- Andre Bluehs: Should I learn C++?
If you’d like to submit a question to be answered in our next episode,
record an audio file (90 seconds or less) and mail it to podcast@stackoverflow.com.
The transcript wiki for this episode is available for editing.




