Our domain name registrar is GoDaddy. We’ve had a lot of problems with GoDaddy’s handling of DNS, where DNS entries will suddenly appear and disappear at random. Often, changing a completely unrelated DNS record would result in other DNS entries going missing for hours. Extremely frustrating.
As a result of many, many bad experiences, over the weekend, we’ll be switching DNS providers. I asked around about quality DNS providers and I got a few consistent recommendations:
I was also (hilariously) referred to a Server Fault question on Hosting Your Own DNS. The entire DNS tag on Server Fault is good reading as well.
We eventually decided to go with Dynamic Network Services.
They must know DNS cold, because they have a freaking three letter domain name, man!
I also got to learn the exciting intricacies of exporting DNS records to text format, including the thrilling Start of Authority (SOA) record.
example.com. IN SOA ns.example.com. hostmaster.example.com. (
2003080800 ; sn = serial number
172800 ; ref = refresh = 2d
900 ; ret = update retry = 15m
1209600 ; ex = expiry = 2w
3600 ; min = minimum = 1h
)
Starting at 5 pm PST today, we’ll flip over to the new nameservers:
ns1.p19.dynect.net ns2.p19.dynect.net ns3.p19.dynect.net ns4.p19.dynect.net
It is our hope that outsourcing our DNS to professionals — to companies that specialize in this stuff — will result in less unpredictability when navigating to our websites.
We get the nicest email. (Well, mostly.) This one made me laugh, so I wanted to share it with everyone.

After all, who doesn’t <3 ASCII hearts?
Remember the trilogy stickers I wrote about a while ago?

They’ve arrived. All 40,000 of them. Each box was around 22-25 pounds.
Here’s a close up of each sticker. They are all about 4 1/2″ wide.

Imagine the endless fun you could have with this many stickers!

As to how you, yourself, can get hold of these totally awesome stickers — attend Stack Overflow Dev Days where they will be given away in great profusion! In fact, we reserve the right to physically adhere these stickers to anyone in attendance! (Not really. As far as you know.)
Beyond that, we’re still not sure. Joel is a fan of the SASE (self-addressed stamped envelope) approach, but I still feel that’s asking a bit too much of my fellow sticker enthusiasts.
It’s Friday, so that must mean it’s graph day!
Here are some graphs I picked completely at random that I’d like to show you.
Alexa
Compete
Quantcast
No hyphens were harmed in the creation of this blog post.
(disclaimer: we have a healthy respect for other websites similar to ours, and we believe the internet is quite big enough to support lots of different websites doing things as they see fit. The friendly rivalry presented here is intended for your interest and amusement, nothing more.)
The question occasionally comes up: what web browsers do Stack Overflow users tend to use?
Here’s a quick look at our Analytics data from June 1st – August 19th.
| Firefox | 50.53% |
| Internet Explorer | 29.12% |
| Chrome | 9.04% |
| Safari | 7.33% |
| Opera | 2.44% |
| Mozilla | 1.15% |
| Konqueror | 0.10% |
Note that within Internet Explorer, the breakdown is 45% IE7, 29% IE8, and — this is depressing — 24% IE6. Which means that about 7% of our overall audience is still on creaky, broken, ancient old IE6. The Firefox breakdown is primarily 3.0 and 3.5, with a smattering of older versions.
As for the screen size of Stack Overflow users:
| 1280×1024 | 24.03% |
| 1680×1050 | 14.52% |
| 1280×800 | 14.32% |
| 1024×768 | 12.32% |
| 1440×900 | 11.57% |
| 1920×1200 | 8.40% |
| 1600×1200 | 3.24% |
| 1152×864 | 1.68% |
| 1920×1080 | 1.32% |
| 1400×1050 | 1.28% |
Those resolutions account for about 90% of the audience — those that report this data back to Analytics, anyway.
(Just as an aside, in case anyone was waiting for the podcast: as noted on last week’s episode, there will be no podcast recording this week.)







