After a brief informal nomination period by the existing moderators, and a small impromptu vote on meta, we’ve settled on our three Super User community moderators:

Congratulations to TheTXI, splattne, and Diago! They are all that is standing between us and an endless armada of Ewoks, so wish them luck, and try to support them in whatever way you can.

They are of course joined by our fellow League of (web) Justice member, How-To Geek.

Super User comes out of semi-private beta tomorrow — at 00:01 PST on Tuesday, August 18th. So if you want that coveted Beta badge, this is your last chance!

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:

Stack Overflow sticker proof

Server Fault sticker proof

Super User sticker proof

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.

How-To Geek sticker proof

(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!

i-hope-you-enjoy-your-birthday-infinitely

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!

Remember the League of Justice I said we were forming?

Well, I’m thrilled to announce that our League has added its first new superhero: the How-To Geek.

how-to-geek-logo

I’ve been a fan of The Geek’s site since the very first time I discovered it in late 2007. It’s a fantastic resource filled with great content, and just the right tone. I knew he had a massive success on his hands from day one, and I’ve had an off-and-on email correspondence with Lowell (aka The Geek) long before Stack Overflow was anything more than a gleam in Joel’s eye. This has been in the works for a while.

The Geek is truly one of us. He’s a programmer who had a Stack Overflow account since the beginning …

and he can solve a Rubik’s cube in 3 minutes.

Like us, Lowell believes in the power of getting good content out on the web and in the hands of the community — and always in a clean, ethical, web-friendly way.

That’s why I am proud to announce our official affiliation. Starting today:

  • Lowell will be an active moderator and participant on Super User, helping drive the direction and content of the site.
  • Our “hero roster” at the bottom of every page will offically list howtogeek.com as a member of the team.
  • How-To Geek will act as the ‘editorial content’ yin to Super User ‘user-generated content’ yang, in order to complement and support each other.

This partnership is tremendously exciting to me. By combining forces into our own little Justice League on the web we hope to not only help each other grow, but also to deliver great justice to the web, together, in the form of first-rate content and community!

Any evil we defeat along the way will, I’m sure, be completely coincidental …

oh, and stay tuned for another superhero we’re recruiting into our League over the next months..

Now that we have four sites in the Stack Overflow trilogy:

so-trilogy-logos

Some users disagree with the idea that there should be four sites.

The whole point of these sites is to form a community around specific topics. There’s nothing more toxic to a community, in my experience, than not being able to set boundaries around it. To define what it is, and is not. If you allow discussing everything, you have allowed discussing nothing. There is no (good) community that can form around “let’s just talk about everything and tag it”.

Is it really so hard to figure out which community you belong to, and thus, where your question belongs? Ask yourself this:

  • what is your job title?
  • which community do you consider yourself a part of?
  • what are you trying to accomplish?

You can use the same mountain to go downhill really fast on snow — but it’s plainly evident to the participant which culture they consider themselves a part of, “skiers” or “snowboarders”. There’s not a whole lot of confusion within the community itself. It’s the same reason neighborhoods naturally tend to form in real world communities — Chinatown, Little Italy, garment districts, Wall Street, etcetera. Shared interests are the very basis of community.

Furthermore, there’s plenty of precedent for the “many sites, each dedicated to a specific topic” model on the web. Consider:

GigaOM Network

gigaom-network

Gawker Media Network

gawker-media-network

Weblogs, Inc. Network

weblogs-inc-network

We’re doing something like that, but we don’t think of it as a mundane “network”. No. We have much grander plans. We are building our own League of Justice on the web.

justice-league-small

Do you think anyone sets up camp outside the League of Justice with a bullhorn, shouting:

It’s too confusing to keep track of all you super heroes! Which one has which power, and should be used to fight which enemy? Which one is the right one to help us out in an hour of need? Why can’t there just be one giant superhero, SuperBatGreenMartianFlashHawkManWoman??

No. Because that’s patently ridiculous.

In the League of Justice, each hero combines forces to make something greater than the whole — without sacrificing their original identity. The power of the League is self-evident and testament to the individual strength of each member.

In fact, we have plans to expand our own League of Justice even further in the next few weeks. We’re recruiting some new superheroes to join our League, making it even more awesome.

Stay tuned, because we plan to dispense a whole lot of Justice to the web.