When we integrated jobs.stackoverflow.com, I dropped a little hint:

That said, this is just a start on the careers front. We have some more innovative things we are working on in this area that we hope to roll out in the next 6 to 8 weeks. Like, say, wouldn’t it be cool if your CV listed the stuff programmers really care about, such as your first computer

Joel just announced what we’ve been working on for the last 6-8 weeks at Boston DevDays:

Stack Overflow Careers

careers.stackoverflow.com is intended as a private complement to the public profiles at stackoverflow.com.

Sam Saffron correctly identified our key goals in a speculative meta post:

I know what you’re thinking, there is already the woeful non-international, poorly targeted, tiny note on every page and a check box on your profile that does nothing.

Nonetheless, employers are willing to pay lots of money to find good people, and there is a pool of over 100K developers on stack overflow with a living, breathing resume. Surely we could do better than having a couple of non-relevant links on every page.

  • Target job ads at the location the user is from. I, for one, am not really interested in relocating my life to Albuquerque at the moment.
  • Create a new entity that does jobs better, partner with local job agencies.
  • Collect more information from the end users. Eg. Would you be willing to move? Would you be willing to work from home? Looking for contract or full time? Etc …

We believe that every professional programmer should have a job they love, and current sites like Monster, DICE, craigslist, and so forth do a woefully inadequate job of matching professional programmers with the type of employers who understand the true value of programmers who hit the high notes.

So, then, our goals are twofold:

  1. Avoid the keyword-spam-free-resume ghetto, and build a community of top-notch programmers who are serious about finding a great job. Yes, that means there is a nominal fee to file your CV.
  2. Allow optional, but deep, integration of your public Stack Overflow profile with your private CV. So instead of being a mere list of keywords and answers to questions, you become a living, breathing track record of what kind of programmer you are.

In short, we’re trying to change the rules of the game.

I encourage you to scan through the about page and the faq and share your thoughts in the comments.

Will it work? We don’t know. But, for what it’s worth, we honestly want to connect passionate programmers with companies who appreciate, respect, and — most of all — love passionate programmers.

Go ahead. Try careers.stackoverflow.com out. It’s totally free to get started and see how everything works, and our faaaaaaaaaaaaaaabulous introductory offer of $29 for 3 years of filing is good until November 9th.

As usual, if it works and it’s awesome, the Stack Overflow team takes full credit. And if it sucks, well, I told you this was all Joel’s idea!

The semi-private beta for Super User has begun.

That’s right, it is officially Ewok Time.

At any rate, if you wanted a community where (almost) anything goes, you’re about to get exactly what you asked for in the form of superuser.com. If your question has to do with computers, it will be allowed there.

ewok-closeup

But then again, so are Ewoks. Be careful what you ask for, I guess.

To get started, go to superuser.com and sign up with your OpenID. Here’s the password you’ll need:

ewok.adventure

Be sure to visit the accounts tab of your user page after you join, so you can get the +100 account association bonus on Super User! (Note that this requires at least 200 rep, so be sure to initiate the association from the site where you have at least 200 reputation.)

Leave any feedback/bugs on meta — just tag them superuser.

Have fun — this semi-private beta will run for approximately 2-3 weeks. Also, a little birdie told me that there might be the chance for a user who distinguishes him/herself during the private beta to be elevated to Super User moderator status, if the stars were to align just so…

The logo design contest for superuser.com is now complete.

The voting results helped inform our final decision:

superuser-voting-results

At the time that screenshot was taken, we had 2,303 votes — but the relative percentages were remarkably stable over time. Two clear leaders.

The final winner we decided on was Mogeek, with entry #425 (a late entry!). What I liked about this logo is its simplicity, while simultaneously referencing both the classic Mac OS “face” icon, and old-school ASCII art. This entry was consistently cited by my designery pals (and even Joel himself) as one they liked. First prize is worth $768 or 29 + 28. Congratulations to Mogeek!

superuser-logo-winner

First runner up is entry #214 from PixMan. He wins $200.

superuser-logo-runner-up-1

Second runner up is entry #362 from J. Nathanial Dicke. He also wins $200. (This was one of my favorites.)

superuser-logo-runner-up-2

A special honorable mention goes out to these entries by Raul Padilla, haim, and mfourex. It was a tough call.

Thanks to everyone who took the time to submit an entry!

Now that we’ve got a logo and color scheme, the superuser.com private beta should begin sometime the month, and any Stack Overflow or Server Fault user with reputation of 200 or more is invited!

Q: How do geeks know it’s a holiday?

A: Because the Google logo changed.

Yes, I said we’d launch Server Fault on the 25th, completely missing the fact that the 25th happens to be Memorial Day, a major holiday that most businesses observe, at least here in the United States.

Hopefully everyone had a very pleasant Memorial Day holiday, and came back ready to crack their knuckles and get down to some serious server, networking, and desktop infrastructure business, yes?

sysadminday

Because as of today, Server Fault is open for public beta!

Tell your sysadmin and IT professional friends — come join us at serverfault.com!

(and a quick thanks to our friends at woot! who sponsored the launch, too)

If you’ve been trying to log in to the serverfault.com private beta and haven’t been able to, here’s probably why:

  1. You use Google’s (otherwise excellent) OpenID support on Stack Overflow.
  2. As we just discovered, Google’s OpenIDs are unique per-domain.
  3. Thus, the OpenID string key “fingerprint” that we use to identify you on Stack Overflow is not the same as the OpenID string key that Google returns for Server Fault.

Until we come up with a better workaround, what we recommend is adding an alternate Stack Overflow OpenID from myopenid or another service where the OpenID URL is stable. For example, one of my OpenID accounts is codinghorror.myopenid.com which works fine in both places.

It’s easy to add an alternate OpenID, just make sure you’re logged into your Stack Overflow account, first, then click the “New Login” link as described here.

(this strange behavior is documented by Google as well.)