A quick update on the IT / SysAdmin themed Stack Overflow.

1) The launch will realistically have to be late April, as March has been pretty busy for a variety of reasons.

2) The pursuit of a Joel Spolsky or Jeff Atwood equivalent figure to be the spiritual godfather of the site has been .. unsuccessful. The IT / SysAdmin culture seems more fragmented and less community driven than the programming community for some reason. It’s looking more and more like we will eventually promote selected users with high reputation on the IT site to moderator status.

3) We still need to have a private beta before the public launch, though less than we did with Stack Overflow, as the software is reasonably mature. I will automatically extend private beta invitations to any Stack Overflow user with 200 or more reputation. The initial community for the IT / SysAdmin site will come from programmers who cross over.

4) Thus, if you have a Stack Overflow account in good standing, you will get a small reputation bonus when creating your account on the IT site. Of course this will be done through OpenID as usual. There will also be ways to send questions back and forth from site to site. They are “sister sites”, but they do have their own distinct communities, visual style, and domain names.

5) No, we can’t call it Rack Overflow, and here’s why:

nice-server-rack

Sorry. I know it’s clever, and all, but it’s just a bad idea.

At the moment I am leaning heavily toward the name serverfault.com. A quick straw poll on Twitter got reasonably positive results. I realize it’s not as good a name as Stack Overflow.

But this site has such high risk of a billion “how do I install my printer” questions that the name has to be more obvious (e.g. the word server, specifically), and clearly indicate that this is a community for IT Pro and SysAdmin types.

I’ve noted many times that naming is one of the hardest things in programming, and really in life altogether. Having a “good enough” name to move forward and get things rolling is probably more important than getting it perfect. I liked Jon Skeet’s take on this, where he opens with the T.S. Eliot poem The Naming of Cats.

The Naming of Cats is a difficult matter,
It isn’t just one of your holiday games

When you notice a cat in profound meditation,
The reason, I tell you, is always the same:
His mind is engaged in a rapt contemplation
Of the thought, of the thought, of the thought of his name:
His ineffable effable
Effanineffable
Deep and inscrutable singular Name.

And this quote from Phil Karlton:

There are only two hard things in Computer Science: cache invalidation and naming things.

Having recently named a human being, I heartily concur.

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84 Responses

  1. Diego says:

    I agree with you, naming is hard (very hard). Personally, the first thing that popped in to my head when I read serverfault.com was, “it could be a website about tennis”.

    And yeah, rackoverflow.com is one of those that are funny for the first 0.5 seconds, then the affect wears off.

  2. Pies says:

    I suggest “Server’s Fault”. Or “User’s Fault” ;)

    Other suggestions: SysOverflow, Techies, ServerDown, Rootly.

  3. Andrea D'Alessandro says:

    Name proposal: coredump

  4. Andrea D'Alessandro says:

    Another suggestion: segmentation fault

  5. Rob says:

    A class suggestion – Guru Meditation or Guru Meditation error – http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guru_Meditation

  6. Dani says:

    Oh, come on! Rack Overflow rocks!

  7. Orihara says:

    Segmentation fault seems like a good name to me. Also could use segfault.

  8. John says:

    I guess DoctorWatson is not possible: )

  9. Jason Baker says:

    * 404: IT community not found

    I had another funny but probably impractical one in mind, but I forgot it. :(

    Seriously though, why not ask a more IT-oriented crowd rather than a crowd that’s going to figure out how to make stack overflows relevant to IT? (hint: they’re not)

  10. jj33 says:

    I think you should register “ishard.com” and then just use subdomains – it.ishard.com, programming.ishard.com…. A darn, it’s taken, what are the odds =)

  11. Norbert says:

    What about :”sysupgrade.com”?

  12. scott says:

    it needs to be rackoverflow, get over it

  13. Ólafur Waage says:

    A few ideas.

    stoperror.com
    powerfailure.com
    bootvolume.com
    writefailed.com
    memorydump.com

  14. Prakash says:

    http://www.fatal-error.com

  15. nobody_ says:

    I see several names suggested already; if you have one you want to add, please check that it’s not already suggested in the previous IT Overflow blog post:

    http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2009/01/coming-in-march-it-stack-overflow/#comments

    As for the current favorite, serverfault.com, I think that it’s certainly good enough, though I do think we can do a lot better. Also, I’m hoping that the name selection process will be like the one for Stack Overflow, where there’s a list of 10-15 potential names that people vote on (as opposed to being hand-picked by the SO team or a Twitter straw poll).

  16. tomjedrz says:

    Jeff –

    As you should have figured out by now, programmers and sysadmins are different. If you put programmers in charge of \ServerFault\, it will reduce the likelihood of success.

    Here’s why … one of the programmer-type moderators will suggest stupid, such as building a production server yourself with non-standard components. Said moderator will then lose all credibility among sysadmin-types, and they will be less likely to come to \ServerFault\ again for information.

    You and Joel could ask someone at your respective hosting companies to get involved. You could ask someone at one of the trade rags (say Apicella or Bruzzese at InfoWorld) to get involved. Or you could do what you did with StackOverflow .. put it out there and let the community figure it out. Same OpenIds can work, but with a \new\ reputation pool.

    Good luck ..

  17. Scott Barbour says:

    How about postfail.com? As in “POST (Power on self-test) Fail”

    It’s a nice term that most machines would have in common.

  18. David Alpert says:

    I vote for Richard Campbell. Twice. Or until the buffer overflows.

  19. Jacob says:

    You need to be talking with the server folks, but here’s a suggestion that’ll pull in the old-time mainframe folks:

    abend.com

  20. maeghith says:

    Oh, come on, Where are the obvious?

    BOFH’s lair: any IT pro that doesn’t know what a BOFH is, probably doesn’t deserve to know the site, and lair sounds spooky enough in a “there may be dragons” way to get near the site :)

    Although other option with a similar 2 connotations would be “PEBKAC smasher”

    Both bofhslair.com and pebkacsmasher.com domains seem availalble right now.

  21. Zack says:

    I suggest: Buffer Underrun

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buffer_underrun

    It’s available:

    http://reports.internic.net/cgi/whois?whois_nic=bufferunderrun.com&type=domain

    Sounds similar to Stack Overflow… but more hardware-ish.

  22. El says:

    Congrats on the kid!

    Other topic…With the caveat that I’ve done only rudimentary stuff with both sysadmin and programming….

    Does this mean you’re assuming the new site will be all about servers? When I think of IT folks, they do other stuff too–work with user’s computers to get software up, running, and coordinated (and sometimes get invasive crap off the systems that just doesn’t want to go); work with network conflicts, especially with different operating systems on the same network; create or modify utilities to get different jobs done; figure out what hardware or software to get and get it for different purposes (financial, graphics, desktop publishing, science–add-ons to computers that collect data from experiments, undoubtedly others).

    “Server” just seems like an overly specific term for what sysadmins and other IT folks might want to talk about. Also, “fault” isn’t exactly a positive concept.

    Admittedly, my info is not at all recent. But it might make sense to give actual sysadmins an edge in any voting for the site name.

  23. theman_on_vista says:

    it.stackoverflow.com

    the other suggestions are whack

  24. jason says:

    What reddit.com’s namespace style?

    stackoverflow.com/r/programming
    stackoverflow.com/r/it
    stackoverflow.com/r/talk

    Users can hangout at their respective topic or get the aggregate on the front page.

    This feels like the opposite direction your heading but since I’ll be using both sites I’d prefer it was the same site.

  25. Michael Stum says:

    The problem with Reddit-style is that the name Stack Overflow is absolutely meaningless to anyone outside of programming. Although one can argue that SO may be a strong brand now, but I think if they wanted that they would have need to pick a different name. I don’t know any good names for a site where all sorts of Expers exchange information though :(

  26. Peter says:

    -1 for ServerFault.com

    I think it’s too limiting. If my printer is not working, to use your example, “Why would I go to a site about servers? What’s a ’server’ anyway?” I know it’s hard, but let’s keep looking. I saw a few suggestions here that were better than SF (syfy :)

  27. KTamas says:

    Segfault.com sounds good.

  28. Marc Reside says:

    Jacob, please no ABEND. That would make me cry. :P

    I would have suggested \technicaldifficulties.com\ but it’s taken.

    You could always go for \systemterminal.com\ … a sort of double-entendre. And it’s available as of this posting.

    :)

  29. Andrei Rinea says:

    Nooo.. what’s wrong with RackOverflow?! I like it. I will always like it.

    My vote goes to rackoverflow.

  30. Chris Jester-Young says:

    I like Rack Overflow, but:

    Jeff has a point about not naming the site Rack Overflow if the site is to be taken seriously. Already, the Coding Horror article about the Uncanny Valley has already drawn criticism: http://herbsutter.wordpress.com/2008/12/17/rich-gui-saasweb-20-apps-should-not-be-considered-harmful/

    I’m by no means uptight but I dare say the a majority of the target audience work in large corporate settings, where a site named Rack Overflow may very well get on the wrong side of corporate web policies. Unfortunate, but it’s what it is.

    I almost want to suggest RedundancyDept.com (”Welcome to the Redundancy Department of Redundancy”, as a pun on perhaps the #1 requirement on any well-run IT setup), but I’ll sleep on it (as I’ve done for the last few months :-P) and see what else I come up with.

  31. configurator says:

    I’d name it http://www.usererror.com.

    I can’t imagine my sysadmin going to such a site to answer questions. He has better use of his time. My programmer friends, however, did go to the site for a while and answer questions.
    I think that programmers enjoy solving problems more than admins, which is why stack overflow will always be a good site.

  32. Joe L. says:

    How about faulttolerant.com or faulttolerance.com? Aside from the sysadmin meaning, the site is tolerant of your faults (ie. you don’t know something), and will help you recover. It’s also similar sounding to stackoverflow (same number of words and syllables ;-)

  33. Jonathan Parker says:

    I’m sure you could buy http://ipconflict.com/

  34. Jonathan Parker says:

    http://127001.com/ is owned but isn’t being used.

  35. sliderhouserules says:

    I like servercrash better than serverfault.

    networkdown, localhost, hardreset, systemfailure, cutthehardline, terabit, something along the lines of the emergency code you’d see on a beeper when a server went down…

  36. mark harrison says:

    I still think it.stackoverflow.com is good.

  37. AndyM says:

    RaidController.com

  38. theman_on_vista says:

    jeff –
    hi, its me again.

    please consider http://it.stackoverflow.com

    thanks

  39. Shoban says:

    What about rackoverflow.com?

  40. theman_on_vista says:

    shoban – http://blog.stackoverflow.com/wp-content/uploads/nice-server-rack.jpg

  41. Brian says:

    Corporate RAID

  42. Abdu says:

    Are people checking if the names are available?
    rackoverflow.com is already taken. Unless the name belongs to them or they are planning to buy the domain name from the onwer.

  43. Jonathon Watney says:

    +1 faulttolerance.com

  44. Jason J. W. Williams says:

    You should take a look at Ben Rockwood:

    http://www.cuddletech.com/blog/

    He’s also been starting a SA podcast, and is very active in the UNIX community.

    Regarding the name, my vote is for Bus Overflow. :-)

    -J

  45. Mike Sickler says:

    How about http://www.pcloadletter.com ?

  46. Waldemar says:

    http://it.stackoverflow.com is a nice option. serverfault.com sounds like Jurassic Part II or something. :O:O:O

  47. BobbyShaftoe says:

    All this talk about it.stackoverflow.com. You all realize that will just make things confusing, right? You tell a coworker “Hey, just go to IT.stackoverflow.com” and he will go home and “say, oh I’ll try that stackoverflow, whatever that means.” It’s not as if the plan is to have baking.stackoverflow.com or politics.stackoverflow.com so I don’t think it’s really necessary to go the subdomain route.

    I agree ServerFault.com isn’t the best either. The one common denominator in most IT related topics is networking. No matter whether you’re a Linux/UNIX admin or Windows/Novell/etc, you should be fluent in networking and TCP/IP. So maybe you can come up with cute names regarding packets, frames, routers, switches and so forth, rather than platform specific error messages.

  48. toast says:

    pingback.com
    droppedpacket.com
    baseT.com (Nevermind, that’s horrible.)
    thewebsiteisdown.com (I know, I know)
    packetrelay.com (Actually, kind of catchy)
    eighthlayer.com (OSI humor anyone?)

  49. Paul D. Waite says:

    If you named it Rack Overflow, maybe the lady in the picture could be the spiritual godmother?

  50. theman_on_vista says:

    hi my name is bobby shaftoe. im going to criticise people and their suggestions without adding any real value myself.

  51. Simon Earnshaw says:

    HardwareOverflow.com

    The genius is it’s simplicity ;)

  52. Joel Coehoorn says:

    > “We still need to have a private beta before the public launch, though less than we did with Stack Overflow, as the software is reasonably mature.”

    I don’t think you can call the SO software “mature” until you’ve finished your much-talked-about database refactor, rolled out the new system, and spent some time to make sure it works as well as expected.

    Or have you already done this?

  53. theman_on_vista says:

    howdoiconnectaprinter.com

  54. BobbyShaftoe says:

    @theman_on_vista, I did offer suggestions. In fact, the next commenter after me made suggestions based on my suggestion. Perhaps you don’t read very well and unfortunately I can’t help you with that. I simply give a reason to not use “it.stackoverflow.com” that was suggested a million times. There is even another very long comment thread on this blog about the very same issue.

  55. Simon Earnshaw says:

    http://www.outOfTheEthernet.com

  56. nobody_ says:

    How about pbkac.com? Those in IT know it stands for \problem between keyboard and chair\ (a joke which means that the user is the problem).

    Too bad it’s already taken…

    http://whois.domaintools.com/pbkac.com

    (psst… see who the owner is!)

  57. cruachan says:

    falloverflow.com is available, and it nicely keeps the brand whilst adding a nice pun

  58. chazzer says:

    Can’t beleive no one has suggested bsod.com

  59. Craig says:

    How about http://www.callthegrandkids.com ?

  60. tom says:

    “Now with 49% _fewer_ posts about cats.”

    They’re countable, so don’t use less.

  61. theman_on_vista says:

    @cruachan – name is awefull

    @chazzer – perhaps its MS specific and probably already taken?

    @craig – lol

    @tom –

    WHERE IS THE NEXT PODCAST?? IM FREAKIN OUT

  62. Eugene Katz says:

    “The launch will realistically have to be late April”. Right, 6-8 weeks it is!

  63. Armagon says:

    Task Overload

    - refers to overburdened sysadmins managing overburdened systems.

  64. Barry says:

    1. Segmentation fault (aka segfault) is a programmer thing and not an IT thing. It’s what happens when you don’t check your pointers and try to access memory you don’t have permission to touch. C programmers know it all too well.
    2. Rack Overflow isn’t that clever. It just sounds like Stack Overflow and that can’t be the main reson to go with the name. I’m all for pictures of women of gifted proportions, but I think that naming route leads only to perpetuating a bad stereotype that we really need to break.

    My suggestions are along the lines of p(e)bkac and bofh (bastard operator from hell).
    enterpriseready.com
    notenterpriseready.com
    productionservermadefromspareparts.com has the right attitude, but it’s way too long.
    fixityesterday.com ?
    fixthevpnnow.com ?
    serverdowntime.org/net <- I really like this one. It speaks to the life of an IT worker and suggests a relaxed place to share wisdom. Available if you hurry.

  65. theman_on_vista says:

    who is gonna be the a-hole that buys up all these domains before jeff does ?? (just in case jeff atwood were to see a name he liked)

  66. Barry says:

    I moonlight for a webhosting company. I could tell my employer to grab the unregistered ones… I don’t think he’d be up for it though.

    Also:
    unscheduleddowntime.com
    unplanneddowntime.com
    scheduleddowntime.com
    accidentaldowntime.com

  67. Ken says:

    systemhalted.com ?

  68. Ken says:

    Disregard, I suck. It’s already taken (though the present site looks like it’s down for maintenance)

  69. Aaron Seet says:

    That is an awesome rack there. Now can you get the woman out of the way, she’s blocking the view.

  70. Aaron Seet says:

    TheServerRoom.com is available as a Premium Domain Name, if you are interested.

  71. Michael says:

    Woot Solved!

    http://wootsolved.com

    The problem was solved triumphantly :-)

  72. Anders Sandvig says:

    Some random thoughts:

    kernelpanic.com
    segfault.com
    trialanderror.com
    servererror.com
    rootusers.com
    iamroot.com
    rootpanic.com
    iamsuperuser.com
    superuserpanic.com
    godcomplex.com
    serveronfire.com
    pebkac.com
    sysadminsanonymous.com

  73. Chris says:

    serverfail.com?

  74. Anthony DeRobertis says:

    magicsmoke.com (taken, but not used: what powers electronics, by observation of their workingness after it escapes)

    Something with flood or flap in it (networking terms).

    And, segfault.com is not only a programmer term, but it’d also be confusing with segfault.org, the humor site (if it still exists, too lazy to check)

  75. Johan Buret says:

    Defaultroute.com : where network packets and administrator go when there are no other ways

  76. Adam says:

    If it hasn’t already been suggested: Internal Error.

  77. Dustman says:

    clusterjob.com
    clusterdown.com
    rack-stack-and-two-smoking-clusters.com :D

  78. Greg says:

    Just keep it simple, and strengthen the brand.

    Meaning something ‘overflow’ in it:

    itoverflow.com
    systemoverflow.com
    etc

  79. Mike M says:

    Have you thought about asking Bruce Schneier?

  80. Oskar Duveborn says:

    superuser.com sounded neat and simple…. even though it might feel slightly awkward having the word user in there.

  81. htxt says:

    What about sigterm?

  82. Kyle says:

    I know you’ve already chosen a name, but, this would’ve been kinda cool too…

    sudofixit.com

  83. Mary-Anne says:

    Anything about root or sudo
    is Unix/Linux specific.
    If that is what you want,
    then rootusers and sudofixit
    are good choices.

    If not, I can suggest
    solveadmin
    solveit
    adminanswers
    itcommunity
    admincommunity

    Of these I like
    admincommunity
    because it is clearest what it intends
    and solveit
    because it sounds like “Solve it!”
    the best.

  84. Kelly French says:

    Naming things is one of the most important and hardest things to do in programming. many a time I’ve worked on a conceptual model and realized that the names the customer uses are actually causing them more headaches than they would admit. The human problem of course is people don’t like change and would rather put up with ambiguity rather than call something familiar by a new name. I would say that this tends to happen more in IT than in other industries. I was watching a training video about oil-field equipment maintenance and was amazed at how many terms were being bandied about. It wasn’t that the terms were all that technical rather it was that they had specific names for everything and expected the audience to know the terms. Think about it, if you’re on an active drilling rig, one of the most dangerous places to work, you need to know that when you ask for a wrench you’ll get handed the right tool. Another example is a surgeon. There might be 13 different scalpels, let’s name them A – M, used for a given operation. If you ask for the H scalpel you don’t mean any scalpel, the G, or the I scalpel. Of course it helps that a standard set of names exists and learning all the names is part of the expected training for the field.

    Why don’t we have standard names for the things upon which we manipulate? My guess would be that as humans we’re lazy and that communication is hard. I’m also sure that our challenge with managing software can also carry some of the blame. The question is, what do we do? We can’t force people into throwing out more terms, like orthogonal, when the communication environment is already crowded with buzzwords. Where do we turn to develop some standard terms? The ACM? They seem far removed from working programmers. Dr. Dobbs Journal? Maybe but who’se going to consider them the authoritative source? IEEE? I don’t know enough about them as an organization to even hazard a guess.

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