If you’re a top user on any of the Trilogy sites, I’ve got some good news for you. As a gesture of thanks for being such an involved member of the community, we’d like to send you some Trilogy stickers absolutely free!

The fine print: to take advantage of this offer, you must be on page 1 or page 2 of the /users page of any trilogy site.
- stackoverflow.com/users
- serverfault.com/users
- superuser.com/users
- meta.stackoverflow.com/users (page 1 only)
(due to strictly limited “special edition” meta stickers, you must be on page 1 of meta.) If you are a top user on multiple sites, you have my most hearty congratulations, but you can only claim stickers once, not multiple times. If we have already sent you stickers for any reason, you can’t request them again.
To claim your stickers, simply click here to enter your address and we’ll get the stickers mailed out to you within a week or so.
Also, because not everyone reads the blog, I’ll try to shoot an email tomorrow to all the relevant users to make sure they’re aware of this fabulous offer.
update: all stickers were mailed Tuesday, October 13th. This reflects any top user sticker requests up to October 7th, and I don’t see any new ones, so I think we’re complete! Enjoy your stickers — you’ve earned them.
Like any rational human being, you probably have an insatiable desire for Stack Overflow Trilogy stickers. It’s only natural.
But how do you get your hands on these sweet, sweet, hunks of colored vinyl?
Good news! You can!
Simply mail a Self-Addressed Stamped Envelope to:
Stack Overflow Stickers
c/o Fog Creek Software
55 Broadway, 25th Floor
New York, NY 10006
The returned envelope will contain one Stack Overflow, one Super User, and one Server Fault sticker. However, if you’d like all three stickers to be of one particular type, no problem; just indicate that preference somewhere on the envelope.
If you run a user group or company meeting and you would like a batch of stickers to provide at your next meeting, please send a short letter on company/group letterhead requesting stickers to the above address. Also indicate how many you’re requesting.
If you are outside the United States, the concept of SASE is a bit tougher. You have two options here:
- Include US $1 in the envelope to cover international postage (currently $0.98 at the time I am writing this).
- Include an International Reply Coupon with your self-addressed envelope.
One word of caution: if you are on the first two /user pages of any Trilogy site, a little birdie told me you might have free stickers coming your way, so hold off on mailing anything.
We’d like to get these stickers in the hands of as many people as possible, so don’t be shy in requesting them — particularly if you know of a user group or meeting that would be interested, or any other opportunities to distribute them more effectively.
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.
As mentioned on the podcast, we’re working on Stack Overflow Trilogy stickers. I just placed the order with websticker, in fact, and here are the proofs:
And because we fully support members of our League of (web) Justice, I ordered some for our fellow league member, How-To Geek, as well.
(all stickers are 4 1/2″ wide, custom die cut white vinyl, and printed in full color)
These will of course be given out at Stack Overflow Dev Days, and in other ways that we haven’t quite figured out completely yet.
It was one year ago today that the Stack Overflow private beta started. The first question was asked at 21:42 on July 31st, 2008.
Which means we’ve been doing this thing in public for a full year now — it’s a Stack Overflow birthday!

Some stats for our first year:
- Three new “family” sites have launched (serverfault.com, superuser.com, and meta.stackoverflow.com)
- 208 blog posts have been posted
- 63 podcasts have been recorded
- 258,560 questions have been asked; 932,356 answers have been provided
- 104,213 registered accounts have been created
- two full-time associates are on board (Jarrod and Geoff)
- Stack Overflow now peaks at 965k pageviews per day, and 414k visits per day.
But more important than any of this, is that I think we’ve honestly raised the quality bar for getting good answers to programming questions on the internet. There is nothing more thrilling to me than clicking on a Stack Overflow family search result in my own web searches — I know the page will load fast, and the information I seek will be right at hand. And it’ll be clean, clear, and formatted well through the tireless fractional effort of programmers just like me. Oh, and I do my part too — I vote the heck out of things I find useful, and always try to leave them better than I found them, by providing more information in an answer or comment, or editing the posts for clarity.
If this thing we’ve been doing for the past year has been a success, I can’t take credit for that. But you can:
This is the scary part, the great leap of faith that Stack Overflow is predicated on: trusting your fellow programmers. The programmers who choose to participate in Stack Overflow are the “secret sauce” that makes it work. You are the reason I continue to believe in developer community as the greatest source of learning and growth. You are the reason I continue to get so many positive emails and testimonials about Stack Overflow. I can’t take credit for that. But you can.
I learned the collective power of my fellow programmers long ago writing on Coding Horror. The community is far, far smarter than I will ever be. All I can ask — all any of us can ask — is to help each other along the path.
Nothing motivates me more than the idea that, together, we’re raising the quality of our little corner of the internet in a tiny but measurable way. It is both a pleasure and an honor to serve the community in this endeavor, and I look forward to many more years of the same.
update: Yearling badges are now being awarded. Consider that your birthday cake!







