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	<title>Blog - Stack Exchange</title>
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	<itunes:subtitle>A look inside the Stack Exchange Network</itunes:subtitle>
	<itunes:summary>The Stack Exchange team gives you an unparalleled look inside the building and running of one of the web&#039;s hottest startups: Stack Exchange.  Instead of the typical podcast format, we&#039;re joined by a different guest each week as they discuss the strategy and direction of Stack Exchange, the decisions they&#039;ve made about the community and where things are going next.</itunes:summary>
	<itunes:keywords>Programming, Stack, Exchange, Stack, Overflow, Computers, Technology, Information, Internet, Question, Answer, Q&#38;A</itunes:keywords>
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		<title>Podcast #49 &#8211; The One Where We Edited Out The Title Reference</title>
		<link>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2013/06/podcast-49-the-one-where-we-edited-out-the-title-reference/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2013/06/podcast-49-the-one-where-we-edited-out-the-title-reference/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 11 Jun 2013 11:51:03 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alex Miller</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[podcasts]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.stackoverflow.com/?p=13434</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Welcome to episode 49 of the Stack Exchange Podcast! We are welcoming special guest Matt Grum, as well as usual suspects Joel, David, and Jay.  Matt is the top rep user on Photography. He&#8217;s got 957 answers (and has never asked a question)! He&#8217;s a photographer and a developer, so his exposure to the Photography site [...]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Welcome to episode 49 of the Stack Exchange Podcast! We are welcoming special guest <a href="http://photo.stackexchange.com/users/1375/matt-grum" target="_blank">Matt Grum</a>, as well as usual suspects Joel, David, and Jay.  Matt is the top rep user on <a href="http://photography.stackexchange.com/" target="_blank">Photography</a>. He&#8217;s got 957 answers (and has never asked a question)! He&#8217;s a photographer and a developer, so his exposure to the Photography site came from his involvement with Stack Overflow</p>
<ul>
<li>First, some site milestones! <a href="http://blender.stackexchange.com/" target="_blank">Blender</a> is in public beta. (Matt is way more qualified to tell you what Blender is than any of the rest of us.) Also, the second attempt at a <a href="http://freelancing.stackexchange.com/" target="_blank">Freelancing</a> site is successfully moving to public beta.</li>
<li>In graduation news, <a href="http://salesforce.stackexchange.com/" target="_blank">Salesforce</a> is going to fully graduate after a very quick run through the beta process. Also, <a href="http://christianity.stackexchange.com/" target="_blank">Christianity</a> graduated, and its design is beautiful and you should check it out (nice job Jin!).</li>
<li>And lastly (and sadly), <a href="http://libraries.stackexchange.com/" target="_blank">Libraries</a> is closing.</li>
<li>What privileges does Matt remember getting? He thinks he remembers when he learned he could edit other people&#8217;s posts, but he&#8217;s generally stayed away from the management of the site and just focuses on answering photography questions instead.</li>
<li>The Chicago Sun-Times <a href="http://www.tuaw.com/2013/06/03/chicago-sun-times-fires-photography-staff-tells-journalists-to/" target="_blank">fired all its photographers and told its journalists to use iPhones</a>. Matt and our hosts have opinions on this intersection of journalism and amateur photography.</li>
<li>Google Glass is interesting in this context. What if taking a photo is now even more accessible than just taking out your phone?</li>
<li>Jay wants to ask a question that might be terrible for our site but great for a podcast: if someone had an old point-and-shoot camera and wanted to upgrade, what should they do?</li>
<li>Speaking of shopping questions… Photography is much more lenient with them than other sites on our network. Weirder yet, it seems to be working.</li>
<li>Photography exists at the intersection of art and technology. Since Matt is a developer and a photographer, he kind of exists at that intersection too (and so did his thesis).</li>
<li>Sometimes our sites are difficult to use, but if you want to use our site to learn something interesting, check out <a href="http://photo.stackexchange.com/users/1375/matt-grum?tab=answers" target="_blank">Matt&#8217;s answers</a>. They are extremely high-quality. <a href="http://photo.stackexchange.com/questions/4487/why-are-wide-angle-lenses-so-much-more-expensive/4492#4492" target="_blank">This one</a> is his most highly voted answer.</li>
<li>Matt photographs weddings and tells us about some of the coolest ones he&#8217;s seen. (Costume weddings are classy and fancy, not, like, Darth Vader-themed.) As a wedding photographer, you&#8217;ve got to dress to fit in, and interact and have fun with the guests in order to get great casual shots. Also, don&#8217;t use a spy satellite.</li>
<li>We have a user question!  <a href="http://twitter.com/moneywithwings" target="_blank">@moneywithwings</a> wants to know if Stack Overflow has a rule against editing somebody else&#8217;s code. Matt says we encourage collaboration and want to make sure we have the best information available; Jay wants to hire him on the spot. (By the way, <a href="http://stackexchange.com/about/hiring" target="_blank">we&#8217;re hiring</a>! and also, you can ask your own user questions at <a href="http://s.tk/podcastquestions" target="_blank">s.tk/podcastquestions</a>.)</li>
</ul>
<p>Thanks for listening to the Stack Exchange podcast, and thanks to our guest Matt Grum and his band <a href="http://wearejuno.com/" target="_blank">Juno</a> for the outro music!<br />
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		<itunes:duration>0:49:44</itunes:duration>
		<itunes:subtitle>Welcome to episode 49 of the Stack Exchange Podcast! We are welcoming special guest Matt Grum, as well as usual suspects Joel, David, and Jay.  Matt is the top rep user on Photography. He&#8217;s got 957 answers (and has never asked a question)! He[...]</itunes:subtitle>
		<itunes:summary>Welcome to episode 49 of the Stack Exchange Podcast! We are welcoming special guest Matt Grum, as well as usual suspects Joel, David, and Jay.  Matt is the top rep user on Photography. He&#8217;s got 957 answers (and has never asked a question)! He&#8217;s a photographer and a developer, so his exposure to the Photography site came from his involvement with Stack Overflow

First, some site milestones! Blender is in public beta. (Matt is way more qualified to tell you what Blender is than any of the rest of us.) Also, the second attempt at a Freelancing site is successfully moving to public beta.
In graduation news, Salesforce is going to fully graduate after a very quick run through the beta process. Also, Christianity graduated, and its design is beautiful and you should check it out (nice job Jin!).
And lastly (and sadly), Libraries is closing.
What privileges does Matt remember getting? He thinks he remembers when he learned he could edit other people&#8217;s posts, but he&#8217;s generally stayed away from the management of the site and just focuses on answering photography questions instead.
The Chicago Sun-Times fired all its photographers and told its journalists to use iPhones. Matt and our hosts have opinions on this intersection of journalism and amateur photography.
Google Glass is interesting in this context. What if taking a photo is now even more accessible than just taking out your phone?
Jay wants to ask a question that might be terrible for our site but great for a podcast: if someone had an old point-and-shoot camera and wanted to upgrade, what should they do?
Speaking of shopping questions… Photography is much more lenient with them than other sites on our network. Weirder yet, it seems to be working.
Photography exists at the intersection of art and technology. Since Matt is a developer and a photographer, he kind of exists at that intersection too (and so did his thesis).
Sometimes our sites are difficult to use, but if you want to use our site to learn something interesting, check out Matt&#8217;s answers. They are extremely high-quality. This one is his most highly voted answer.
Matt photographs weddings and tells us about some of the coolest ones he&#8217;s seen. (Costume weddings are classy and fancy, not, like, Darth Vader-themed.) As a wedding photographer, you&#8217;ve got to dress to fit in, and interact and have fun with the guests in order to get great casual shots. Also, don&#8217;t use a spy satellite.
We have a user question!  @moneywithwings wants to know if Stack Overflow has a rule against editing somebody else&#8217;s code. Matt says we encourage collaboration and want to make sure we have the best information available; Jay wants to hire him on the spot. (By the way, we&#8217;re hiring! and also, you can ask your own user questions at s.tk/podcastquestions.)

Thanks for listening to the Stack Exchange podcast, and thanks to our guest Matt Grum and his band Juno for the outro music!
</itunes:summary>
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		<title>Podcast #48 &#8211; Sponsored by Powdermilk Biscuits</title>
		<link>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2013/06/podcast-48-sponsored-by-powdermilk-biscuits/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2013/06/podcast-48-sponsored-by-powdermilk-biscuits/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 03 Jun 2013 14:58:12 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alex Miller</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[podcasts]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.stackoverflow.com/?p=13428</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Welcome to Stack Exchange Podcast #48! Our guest today is Jorge Castro, member of the Community Team at Canonical (of Ubuntu fame). We also have Robert Cartaino, our very own Director of Community Development, here at Stack Exchange, as well as the usual suspects &#8211; David Fullerton, Jay Hanlon, and Joel Spolsky..  Our guest Jorge Castro works on Ubuntu, at Canonical. He says to [...]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Welcome to Stack Exchange Podcast #48! Our guest today is <a href="http://jorgecastro.org/" target="_blank">Jorge Castro</a>, member of the Community Team at <a href="http://www.canonical.com/" target="_blank">Canonical</a> (of <a href="http://ubuntu.com/" target="_blank">Ubuntu</a> fame). We also have Robert Cartaino, our very own Director of Community Development, here at Stack Exchange, as well as the usual suspects &#8211; David Fullerton, Jay Hanlon, and Joel Spolsky..  Our guest Jorge Castro works <b>on</b> Ubuntu, <b>at</b> Canonical. He says to pretend it&#8217;s double Os instead of U&#8217;s: Ooboontoo. (David, Jay, and Joel work <b>on</b> Stack Exchange, <b>at</b> Stack Exchange.)</p>
<ul>
<li>So, Jorge! What does a Community Manager at Canonical do? What&#8217;s the role, and what does that actually mean day to day?</li>
<li>At Canonical, the Community Team is a part of the <i>engineering</i> department, not the marketing department. They are tasked with doing things that help engineers do their job and help people improve Ubuntu.</li>
<li>Jorge usually wears pants to work. Usually. The whole team is distributed, and they use IRC, Trello, and Google Hangouts to keep everything moving remotely.</li>
<li>This is all well and good, but what do community managers actually <i>do</i>? Nobody is really sure, either at Canonical or at Stack Exchange. Jorge walks us through the team&#8217;s core responsibilities.</li>
<li>Robert gives his view on the core role of a Community Manager (by the way, we are <a href="http://stackexchange.com/about/hiring/community-manager-telecommute" target="_blank">hiring community managers</a>!)</li>
<li>Jorge&#8217;s team just terminated an experiment with crowdsourcing feature requests and ideas. It was the <a href="http://brainstorm.ubuntu.com/" target="_blank">Ubuntu Brainstorm</a>, and it was originally written by an enthusiast who just kind of decided that it should be done, and Ubuntu picked it up.</li>
<li>Side note: <a href="http://youcanthandletheknuth.com/" target="_blank">You can&#8217;t handle the Knuth</a>.</li>
<li>To finish the Brainstorm story, last month it was decided that… it wasn&#8217;t really working. The barrier to contributing to Ubuntu is getting lower and lower, so people with features to dicuss can just show up to the Developer Summit. The moral of the story is that it&#8217;s in the process of being shut down, but it&#8217;s not ideal to just close all of the communication channels (because sometimes <a href="http://www.collegehumor.com/video/5941080/windows-7-parody" target="_blank">users have great ideas</a>). We discuss the advantages and pitfalls of crowdsourced feature requests.</li>
<li>Jay bought <a href="https://campaign.soylent.me/soylent-free-your-body" target="_blank">this</a> last week.</li>
<li>Anyway. The barrier to participate in Ubuntu is getting lower, so it&#8217;s easier to get people<i>truly</i> involved &#8211; instead of halfheartedly participating in the Brainstorm and <i>feeling</i> like they&#8217;re involved.</li>
<li><a href="http://askubuntu.com/" target="_blank">Ask Ubuntu</a> is one of our sites! It&#8217;s our fourth biggest site by number of questions, with 140k questions, and 3rd for traffic with 231k visits per day. Jorge has been involved with it just about from the start, but he&#8217;s not a moderator &#8211; just <a href="http://askubuntu.com/users/235/jorge-castro" target="_blank">a 20k user</a>.</li>
<li>One initial problem was the cyclical nature &#8211; every time a Ubuntu release came out, there was a flood of new users asking new questions and the answer rate plummeted to the bottom of the <a href="http://stackexchange.com/sites" target="_blank">list</a>. Then the review queue came and saved the world!</li>
<li>Jorge has a feature request: custom review queues. He even went through the proper channels and <a href="http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/156441/let-the-community-add-a-few-data-queries-to-the-review-queue" target="_blank">proposed it on Meta</a>!</li>
<li>Robert walks us through Community Self-Evaluations. The system picks out a certain number of questions, and the community goes through and gauges whether or not the information available is better than the other information out there on the internet. We discuss it for a while.</li>
<li>So what&#8217;s missing for Ask Ubuntu? What could we build that would make it work better? Jorge says the biggest problem the site is having right now is user confusion about what is a bug report and what&#8217;s a configuration issue.</li>
<li> Site launches! As of this recording, <a href="http://opendata.stackexchange.com/" target="_blank">Open Data</a> and <a href="http://networkengineering.stackexchange.com/" target="_blank">Network Engineering</a> are in public beta. Go check &#8216;em out!</li>
</ul>
<p>Thanks to <a href="http://jorgecastro.org/" target="_blank">Jorge Castro</a> and Robert Cartaino for joining us, as well as the Usual Suspects (MINUS Producer Alex, who gets NO credit).</p>
<p>&nbsp;<br />
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&nbsp;</p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2013/06/podcast-48-sponsored-by-powdermilk-biscuits/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>8</slash:comments>
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		<itunes:duration>0:52:12</itunes:duration>
		<itunes:subtitle>Welcome to Stack Exchange Podcast #48! Our guest today is Jorge Castro, member of the Community Team at Canonical (of Ubuntu fame). We also have Robert Cartaino, our very own Director of Community Development, here at Stack Exchange, as well as the [...]</itunes:subtitle>
		<itunes:summary>Welcome to Stack Exchange Podcast #48! Our guest today is Jorge Castro, member of the Community Team at Canonical (of Ubuntu fame). We also have Robert Cartaino, our very own Director of Community Development, here at Stack Exchange, as well as the usual suspects &#8211; David Fullerton, Jay Hanlon, and Joel Spolsky..  Our guest Jorge Castro works on Ubuntu, at Canonical. He says to pretend it&#8217;s double Os instead of U&#8217;s: Ooboontoo. (David, Jay, and Joel work on Stack Exchange, at Stack Exchange.)

So, Jorge! What does a Community Manager at Canonical do? What&#8217;s the role, and what does that actually mean day to day?
At Canonical, the Community Team is a part of the engineering department, not the marketing department. They are tasked with doing things that help engineers do their job and help people improve Ubuntu.
Jorge usually wears pants to work. Usually. The whole team is distributed, and they use IRC, Trello, and Google Hangouts to keep everything moving remotely.
This is all well and good, but what do community managers actually do? Nobody is really sure, either at Canonical or at Stack Exchange. Jorge walks us through the team&#8217;s core responsibilities.
Robert gives his view on the core role of a Community Manager (by the way, we are hiring community managers!)
Jorge&#8217;s team just terminated an experiment with crowdsourcing feature requests and ideas. It was the Ubuntu Brainstorm, and it was originally written by an enthusiast who just kind of decided that it should be done, and Ubuntu picked it up.
Side note: You can&#8217;t handle the Knuth.
To finish the Brainstorm story, last month it was decided that… it wasn&#8217;t really working. The barrier to contributing to Ubuntu is getting lower and lower, so people with features to dicuss can just show up to the Developer Summit. The moral of the story is that it&#8217;s in the process of being shut down, but it&#8217;s not ideal to just close all of the communication channels (because sometimes users have great ideas). We discuss the advantages and pitfalls of crowdsourced feature requests.
Jay bought this last week.
Anyway. The barrier to participate in Ubuntu is getting lower, so it&#8217;s easier to get peopletruly involved &#8211; instead of halfheartedly participating in the Brainstorm and feeling like they&#8217;re involved.
Ask Ubuntu is one of our sites! It&#8217;s our fourth biggest site by number of questions, with 140k questions, and 3rd for traffic with 231k visits per day. Jorge has been involved with it just about from the start, but he&#8217;s not a moderator &#8211; just a 20k user.
One initial problem was the cyclical nature &#8211; every time a Ubuntu release came out, there was a flood of new users asking new questions and the answer rate plummeted to the bottom of the list. Then the review queue came and saved the world!
Jorge has a feature request: custom review queues. He even went through the proper channels and proposed it on Meta!
Robert walks us through Community Self-Evaluations. The system picks out a certain number of questions, and the community goes through and gauges whether or not the information available is better than the other information out there on the internet. We discuss it for a while.
So what&#8217;s missing for Ask Ubuntu? What could we build that would make it work better? Jorge says the biggest problem the site is having right now is user confusion about what is a bug report and what&#8217;s a configuration issue.
 Site launches! As of this recording, Open Data and Network Engineering are in public beta. Go check &#8216;em out!

Thanks to Jorge Castro and Robert Cartaino for joining us, as well as the Usual Suspects (MINUS Producer Alex, who gets NO credit).
&#160;

&#160;</itunes:summary>
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		<title>Welcome Tim Post, our latest Community Manager</title>
		<link>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2013/05/welcome-tim-post-our-latest-community-manager/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2013/05/welcome-tim-post-our-latest-community-manager/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 31 May 2013 15:41:34 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Shog9</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[background]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[community]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.stackoverflow.com/?p=13402</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Community management at Stack Exchange is an&#8230; Interesting job. Parts sociologist, cat-wrangler, therapist, software analyst and cheerleader, this small band of dedicated people work daily to make sure each individual community has the tools and support you need to be as awesome as you are. Of course, we don&#8217;t do it alone: from the very [...]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Community management at Stack Exchange is an&#8230; <em>Interesting </em>job. Parts sociologist, cat-wrangler, therapist, software analyst and cheerleader, this <a href="http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/99338/who-are-the-community-managers-and-what-do-they-do/99341#99341">small band</a> of dedicated people work daily to make sure <a href="http://stackexchange.com/sites">each individual community</a> has the tools and support you need to be as awesome as you are. Of course, we don&#8217;t do it alone: from the very start, Stack Exchange attracted some amazingly helpful and insightful folk who&#8217;ve donated their time and effort to help out &#8211; and <b>I&#8217;m pleased to announce that we&#8217;re adding one of them, <a href="http://stackoverflow.com/users/50049/tim-post" title="The old ape himself">Tim Post</a>, to our full-time staff of Community Managers</b>.</p>
<p><img src="http://i.stack.imgur.com/lh8Cp.png" style="float:left;width:250px;margin-right:10px;margin-bottom:10px;border:1px solid black;" >Tim comes from a systems programming background, starting out way back in the dial-up BBS days. He&#8217;s been working with and managing communities of various sizes ever since, and describes finding Stack Overflow back in the winter of &#8217;08 like &#8220;getting stuck in a huge spiderweb&#8221;. His fascination with the system itself (both the software and the game-like aspect that drives so much participation here) led him to become a moderator, first on Webmasters then on Stack Overflow in <a href="http://stackoverflow.com/election/1">the spring of &#8217;11</a>. Since then, he&#8217;s been a constant help and guide to the many folks using Stack Overflow and Stack Exchange.</p>
<p>When he&#8217;s not working, Tim still enjoys programming (nowadays simply to satisfy his whims), photography, DIY projects and tinkering with whatever he can get his hands on. He resides in the Philippines, thus extending the reach of our global team into the west Pacific. </p>
<p>Tim&#8217;s been working with us on a trial basis for a little while now, and enjoyed our motley crew enough to sign on full-time. You&#8217;ll be seeing a lot more of him in the coming months, so please give him a warm welcome when he drops in on your site.</p>
<hr style="clear:both"/>
<p>Think you have what it takes to manage the communities on Stack Exchange? We&#8217;re <a href="http://stackexchange.com/about/hiring/community-manager-telecommute">hiring community managers</a>, and if you&#8217;re not near <a href="http://stackexchange.com/about/hiring/community-manager-new-york">our NYC HQ</a>, that&#8217;s okay &#8211; <a href="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2013/02/why-we-still-believe-in-working-remotely/">we love remote workers.</a> You get to work with <a href="http://careers.stackoverflow.com/company/stack-exchange">awesome people like Tim</a> and help us guide Stack Exchange as it grows. (And on the off-chance you&#8217;re fluent in Portuguese, you should definitely apply &#8211; we have a special project for you&#8230;)</p>
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		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Company pages on Careers 2.0</title>
		<link>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2013/05/showing-off-those-valued-associates/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2013/05/showing-off-those-valued-associates/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 20 May 2013 17:26:55 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Shog9</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[announcement]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[careers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[stackoverflow]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.stackoverflow.com/?p=13392</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Stack Overflow has always had a strong focus on individual merit. Although collaboration is encouraged to some extent by the editing features, attribution on posts and the design of user profiles all tend to emphasize rugged individuality, that lone wolf toiling away at a keyboard. But most of us don&#8217;t actually work that way. We&#8217;re [...]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Stack Overflow has always had a strong focus on <i>individual</i> merit. Although collaboration is encouraged to some extent by the editing features, attribution on posts and the design of user profiles all tend to emphasize rugged individuality, that lone wolf toiling away at a keyboard.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/fremlin/2384478345/"><img src="http://i.stack.imgur.com/oNtn9.png" title="Wolf 2 by Robert Dewar. Keyboard presumably hidden by wildflowers."></a></p>
<p>But most of us don&#8217;t actually <i>work</i> that way. We&#8217;re social creatures by nature, and the most challenging part of finding a good job can be finding the pack you want to run with. In spite of the dearth of features aimed at networking, folks have been using Stack Overflow to find and research potential colleagues almost since the day it launched &#8211; so a couple years ago, <a href="http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/80834/need-feedback-on-company-page-idea">we started looking for ways to make this a bit easier</a>. Well, <a href="http://blog.careers.stackoverflow.com/2013/05/17/introducing-careers-2-0-company-pages/">now it&#8217;s done</a>:</p>
<blockquote><p>With Company Pages, we’ve focused on the best ways to tell an interesting company story. And what better way to tell your story than with massive photos of workstations, team outings, hackathons, local attractions, and the people who make the companies who they are? There are tightly designed sections to list your company tech stack and benefits, along with plenty of room to be creative and communicate what makes your company special, what awesome products you’re working on, and the philosophy that drives your team forward.<br />
&mdash;<a href="http://blog.careers.stackoverflow.com/2013/05/17/introducing-careers-2-0-company-pages/">Introducing Careers 2.0 Company Pages</a></p></blockquote>
<p>Go check out <a href="http://careers.stackoverflow.com/jobs/companies" title="More than three wolves to this moon">the other wolf-packs</a>&#8230; or <a href="http://careers.stackoverflow.com/products/company-pages">show off your own</a> on Careers 2.0. </p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2013/05/showing-off-those-valued-associates/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>8</slash:comments>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Podcast #47 &#8211; Do You Even Twitter Bro?</title>
		<link>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2013/05/podcast-47-do-you-even-twitter-bro/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2013/05/podcast-47-do-you-even-twitter-bro/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 14 May 2013 21:42:45 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alex Miller</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[podcasts]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.stackoverflow.com/?p=13381</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[We&#8217;re Back!  It&#8217;s been a while since our last podcast (why you ask &#8211; listen to find out!) but we&#8217;re back now and &#8220;stronger&#8221; than ever.  It&#8217;s Joel, David and Jay (plus producer Alex and Abby) coming to you from the brand new SE Podcast Studio (check out the picture below) News of the day: [...]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>We&#8217;re Back!  It&#8217;s been a while since our last podcast (why you ask &#8211; listen to find out!) but we&#8217;re back now and &#8220;stronger&#8221; than ever.  It&#8217;s Joel, David and Jay (plus producer Alex and Abby) coming to you from the brand new SE Podcast Studio (check out the picture below)</p>
<ul>
<li>News of the day: we&#8217;re finally in our new office (and podcast studio). We&#8217;ve got hexagonal offices (and therefore crooked hallways), and a cool café area. AND HEATED TOILET SEATS. And a kitchen with a giant walk-in refrigerator, for our interns (which we don&#8217;t have).</li>
</ul>
<div id="attachment_13382" class="wp-caption aligncenter" style="width: 584px"><a href="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/wp-content/uploads/Screen-Shot-2013-05-14-at-4.40.15-PM.jpg"><img class=" wp-image-13382  " alt="Taping podcasts in our new &quot;studio&quot;!" src="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/wp-content/uploads/Screen-Shot-2013-05-14-at-4.40.15-PM-1024x577.jpg" width="574" height="323" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Taping podcasts in our new &#8220;studio&#8221;!</p></div>
<ul>
<li>The new office has a nice event space. We&#8217;ve even done an event in it already!</li>
<li>Last week, we had all of the remote developers, sysadmins, community managers, and sysadmins fly into New York to come hang out in the new office. We ate sushi and fried chicken and played a lot of ping pong, and also got some work done.</li>
<li>Originally, we had planned these summits to be our Main Decision-Making Time, which ended up working terribly. We need to be able to make our decisions and do our brainstorming with remote team members regardless of whether or not they&#8217;re in the office.</li>
<li>Jay, what&#8217;s happening with the Stack Exchange sites? We closed a couple of small sites - <a href="http://area51.stackexchange.com/proposals/49538/arduino" target="_blank">Arduino</a> and <a href="http://area51.stackexchange.com/proposals/40518/big-data" target="_blank">Big Data</a>. Everything on Arduino could have been discussed on <a href="http://electronics.stackexchange.com/" target="_blank">Electrical Engineering</a> anyway.</li>
<li>We may have the same problem with <a href="http://networkengineering.stackexchange.com/" target="_blank">Network Engineering</a> (currently in private beta), but we&#8217;re more optimistic about that site. Likewise, we shut down <a href="http://bigdata.stackexchange.com">Big Data</a>, but currently have <a href="http://opendata.stackexchange.com/" target="_blank">Open Data</a> in private beta. Learn more about why one will survive where the other languished by listening in.</li>
<li>Next topic: do tags belong in titles? Joel: &#8220;No.&#8221; Jay: &#8220;You&#8217;re wrong.&#8221; (there&#8217;s a bit more to it)</li>
<li>This is a good discussion! You can weigh in in the podcast comments!</li>
<li>David, do we have any new features? Check out our sites in an incognito window to see some stuff you may have missed.</li>
<li>We&#8217;ll be debuting the new Help section soon! Previously, we&#8217;ve had all of our FAQ/help/how-to information spread far and wide across the network sites and their metas. No longer!</li>
<li>Also, we&#8217;re working on some mobile apps. They&#8217;re vaporware at this point.</li>
<li>Related: <a href="http://stackexchange.com/about/hiring" target="_blank">we&#8217;re hiring</a>! Devs, front-end developers/designers (which is it?), community managers, sales people… everything.</li>
</ul>
<p>That&#8217;s our show! Thanks for listening to Stack Exchange Podcast #47. See you in two weeks!<br />
<iframe src="http://w.soundcloud.com/player/?url=http%3A%2F%2Fapi.soundcloud.com%2Ftracks%2F92213289&amp;show_artwork=true" height="166" width="100%" frameborder="no" scrolling="no"></iframe></p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2013/05/podcast-47-do-you-even-twitter-bro/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>20</slash:comments>
			<enclosure url="http://www.podtrac.com/pts/redirect.mp3/feeds.soundcloud.com/stream/92213289-stack-exchange-stack-exchange-podcast-47.mp3" length="39561728" type="audio/mpeg" />
		<itunes:duration>0:41:13</itunes:duration>
		<itunes:subtitle>We&#8217;re Back!  It&#8217;s been a while since our last podcast (why you ask &#8211; listen to find out!) but we&#8217;re back now and &#8220;stronger&#8221; than ever.  It&#8217;s Joel, David and Jay (plus producer Alex and Abby) coming to you fr[...]</itunes:subtitle>
		<itunes:summary>We&#8217;re Back!  It&#8217;s been a while since our last podcast (why you ask &#8211; listen to find out!) but we&#8217;re back now and &#8220;stronger&#8221; than ever.  It&#8217;s Joel, David and Jay (plus producer Alex and Abby) coming to you from the brand new SE Podcast Studio (check out the picture below)

News of the day: we&#8217;re finally in our new office (and podcast studio). We&#8217;ve got hexagonal offices (and therefore crooked hallways), and a cool café area. AND HEATED TOILET SEATS. And a kitchen with a giant walk-in refrigerator, for our interns (which we don&#8217;t have).

Taping podcasts in our new &#8220;studio&#8221;!

The new office has a nice event space. We&#8217;ve even done an event in it already!
Last week, we had all of the remote developers, sysadmins, community managers, and sysadmins fly into New York to come hang out in the new office. We ate sushi and fried chicken and played a lot of ping pong, and also got some work done.
Originally, we had planned these summits to be our Main Decision-Making Time, which ended up working terribly. We need to be able to make our decisions and do our brainstorming with remote team members regardless of whether or not they&#8217;re in the office.
Jay, what&#8217;s happening with the Stack Exchange sites? We closed a couple of small sites - Arduino and Big Data. Everything on Arduino could have been discussed on Electrical Engineering anyway.
We may have the same problem with Network Engineering (currently in private beta), but we&#8217;re more optimistic about that site. Likewise, we shut down Big Data, but currently have Open Data in private beta. Learn more about why one will survive where the other languished by listening in.
Next topic: do tags belong in titles? Joel: &#8220;No.&#8221; Jay: &#8220;You&#8217;re wrong.&#8221; (there&#8217;s a bit more to it)
This is a good discussion! You can weigh in in the podcast comments!
David, do we have any new features? Check out our sites in an incognito window to see some stuff you may have missed.
We&#8217;ll be debuting the new Help section soon! Previously, we&#8217;ve had all of our FAQ/help/how-to information spread far and wide across the network sites and their metas. No longer!
Also, we&#8217;re working on some mobile apps. They&#8217;re vaporware at this point.
Related: we&#8217;re hiring! Devs, front-end developers/designers (which is it?), community managers, sales people… everything.

That&#8217;s our show! Thanks for listening to Stack Exchange Podcast #47. See you in two weeks!
</itunes:summary>
		<itunes:keywords>podcasts</itunes:keywords>
		<itunes:author>The Stack Exchange Team</itunes:author>
		<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
		<itunes:block>no</itunes:block>
	</item>
		<item>
		<title>Get to know the new Stack employees</title>
		<link>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2013/04/get-to-know-the-new-stack-employees/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2013/04/get-to-know-the-new-stack-employees/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 25 Apr 2013 19:51:29 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Joe Humphries</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[announcement]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.stackoverflow.com/?p=13284</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[It seems like just two months ago (OK, it was exactly two months ago) that I announced our last batch of new hires.  Today I&#8217;m pleased to introduce our newest employees.  There are TEN of them &#8230; so get comfy and prepare to learn all about our latest hires, who seem to have an overall [...]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>It seems like just two months ago (OK, it was exactly two months ago) that I announced our <a href="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2013/02/max-oded-wendy-val-shefali-and-mike-welcome-to-the-family/">last batch</a> of new hires.  Today I&#8217;m pleased to introduce our newest employees.  There are TEN of them &#8230; so get comfy and prepare to learn all about our latest hires, who seem to have an overall fondness for food, sports, music, and the great outdoors.</p>
<p><a href="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/wp-content/uploads/Brady-Jessica.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-13170" style="border: 1px solid black;margin-right: 2em" alt="" src="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/wp-content/uploads/Brady-Jessica.jpg" width="200" height="200" /></a><b>Jessica Brady, Associate Sales Representative (Careers 2.0)</b></p>
<p><em>New York</em></p>
<p>Jessica was born and raised in warm, sunny Florida, until she packed up and moved to less warm, less sunny Chicago for non-weather-related reasons (okay, it was school). She has lived in New York and worked in television for the last four years, but is excited to make the leap into a brand new industry at a great company like Stack Exchange. In her spare time, Jessica likes to run for fun, take in a baseball game (TV, radio, or in person), hang out with her four-legged friend Cash (like Johnny)…and yes, watch TV.</p>
<p><strong><a href="http://stackoverflow.com/users/7028/sklivvz"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-13293" style="border: 1px solid black;margin-right: 2em" alt="" src="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/wp-content/uploads/Cecconi-Marco.jpg" width="200" height="200" /></a></strong></p>
<p><strong>Marco Cecconi, Web Developer (Core)</strong></p>
<p><em>London</em></p>
<p>Marco is from Milan, Italy, and he has been traveling around the world for some years. He studied in Singapore, then worked in France, Portugal, and finally settled in the UK for the past four years where he lives in Kent with his wife and kid.  He goes by the handle of Sklivvz on the Stack Exchange network, where he has been a contributor since November 2008 and moderator on Skeptics since February 2011.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><strong><a href="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/wp-content/uploads/Depree-Pieter1.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-13295" style="border: 1px solid black;margin-right: 2em" alt="" src="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/wp-content/uploads/Depree-Pieter1.jpg" width="200" height="200" /></a></strong></p>
<p><strong>Pieter DePree, Recruiter</strong></p>
<p><em>New York</em></p>
<p>Native to sunny Florida, Pieter decided to trade in his flip flops and board shorts for a piece of the good life here in the Big Apple.  Pieter has a passion for travel and has, at last count, traveled to 27 countries including a year spent living abroad in China. Previously, Pieter has been responsible for high volume regional sales recruitment at ADP, as well as the national sales recruitment at Seamless! Outside of work, you might find Pieter hiking, sailing, or playing volleyball.  Pieter is very excited to be helping Stack Exchange grow its global sales teams!</p>
<p><strong><a href="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/wp-content/uploads/Egan-Jim.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-13296" style="border: 1px solid black;margin-right: 2em" alt="" src="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/wp-content/uploads/Egan-Jim.jpg" width="200" height="200" /></a></strong></p>
<p><strong>Jim Egan, Sales Representative (Careers 2.0)</strong></p>
<p><em>Denver<strong></strong></em></p>
<p>Originally from the south side of Chicago, Jim now feels the need to argue with people in bars that Chicago is the greatest city in the world. He&#8217;s passionate about the Bears, Bulls, Blackhawks, and White Sox, so Jim couldn&#8217;t imagine a better sports town. Leaving that behind and moving to the Rockies was tough but needed.  Armed with his trusty sidekick Loomis (pictured here, left), Jim plans to conquer the mountains and everything Denver has to offer. An avid crock-potter and terrible at accents, Jim hopes to fit in nicely.</p>
<p><strong></strong><strong><a href="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/wp-content/uploads/Frey-Paul.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-13297" style="border: 1px solid black;margin-right: 2em" alt="" src="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/wp-content/uploads/Frey-Paul.jpg" width="200" height="200" /></a>Paul Frey, Account Executive (Careers 2.0)</strong></p>
<p><em>London</em></p>
<p>Paul has lived in London since May 2010 and he loves it!  He was born and grew up in Cologne, Germany. Due to this fact he’s a big supporter of his local football club, FC Koeln. But he doesn’t just watch sports; he also loves to be very active, playing European handball up the third German division, and also squash and football. But his biggest passion is cooking and eating! His cooking style is experimental and cross culture…he never uses recipes, he just combines the things he knows and likes. Most of the time his cooking tastes good. ;-)</p>
<p><strong><a href="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/wp-content/uploads/Jenkins-Todd.png"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-13298" style="border: 1px solid black;margin-right: 2em" alt="" src="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/wp-content/uploads/Jenkins-Todd.png" width="200" height="200" /></a>Todd Jenkins, Sales Representative (Careers 2.0)</strong></p>
<p><em>London</em></p>
<p>Todd originally hails from Boston (UK not US!) but now lives in London. He’s looking forward to transferring his sales skills to Stack Exchange! He really enjoys trying new foods and new restaurants, and he has a great love of the outdoors and adventurous walks. Apart from enjoying friends’ company in London&#8217;s nightlife, he does try to keep very sporty, although he admits shamefully that his two favourite sports are the two he’s the worst at (tennis and swimming). Todd is also a huge fan of Liverpool Football Club!!</p>
<p><a href="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/wp-content/uploads/Malhotra-Shikha.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-13299" style="border: 1px solid black;margin-right: 2em" alt="" src="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/wp-content/uploads/Malhotra-Shikha.jpg" width="200" height="200" /></a></p>
<p><strong>Shikha Malhotra, Account Executive (Careers 2.0)</strong></p>
<p><em>London</em></p>
<p>Shikha grew up in Brussels / Belgium and has an Indian background. She has been living in London for over 6 years, and is super excited to join Stack Exchange’s growing UK sales team. During her spare time you will find &#8220;DJ Shake&#8221; mixing the latest Bollywood tunes with a mix of French hip-hop and Arabic flavor, reading books, and learning to play the &#8220;Dhol&#8221; (Indian drum).</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><a href="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/wp-content/uploads/Michalak-Pawel.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-13323" style="border: 1px solid black;margin-right: 2em" alt="" src="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/wp-content/uploads/Michalak-Pawel.jpg" width="200" height="200" /></a></p>
<p><strong>Pawel Michalak, Sales Representative (Careers 2.0)</strong></p>
<p><em>London</em></p>
<p>Pawel is from Poznan, Poland and has lived in England for 7 years. He studied journalism and PR, and used to play handball (the best European sport ever!) quite seriously. He’s upgraded to playing football (the best international sport ever!), and can be found on London football pitches falling over, or screaming “Go Arsenal!” in support of the best football team in the world. You might see him on the road scooting cheerfully on his Vespa between angry Londoners stuck in traffic. He’s very excited about starting at Stack, as you can see here (CTAPT means START in Russian).</p>
<p><a href="http://stackoverflow.com/users/115049/rossipedia"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-13324" style="border: 1px solid black;margin-right: 2em" alt="" src="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/wp-content/uploads/Ross-Bryan.jpg" width="200" height="200" /></a></p>
<p><strong>Bryan Ross, Web Developer (Careers 2.0)</strong></p>
<p><em>Denver</em></p>
<p>An LA native, Bryan Ross (everybody just calls him &#8220;Ross&#8221;) moved to Denver in 2010 after being chewed up and spit out by the rock music industry. A self-taught developer of 15 years, he has an unhealthy interest in language design, expensive keyboards, strong coffee, and music. When he&#8217;s not nitpicking about the merits of various programming acronyms, he can usually be found writing, recording, and mixing in his home studio.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><a href="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/wp-content/uploads/Still-Derek.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-13327" style="border: 1px solid black;margin-right: 2em" alt="" src="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/wp-content/uploads/Still-Derek.jpg" width="200" height="200" /></a></p>
<p><strong>Derek Still, Sales Representative (Careers 2.0)</strong></p>
<p><em>New York</em></p>
<p>Derek spent the first three years of his career in equity sales &amp; trading, and is excited about making the move to a growing firm with unlimited upside like Stack Exchange. He grew up in Philadelphia, spent summers in Cape Cod, and moved to the concrete jungle in 2010. Outside of the office, Derek spends his time traveling, rooting on Philadelphia sports teams (Go Birds), listening to the Grateful Dead, and hanging out with his brothers and friends.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>Visit our <a href="http://www.stackexchange.com/about/hiring">careers page</a> to learn all the reasons Stack Exchange is a ridiculously awesome place to work. </em><em>Want to see your face in our next new hire announcement? Here&#8217;s who we need:</em></p>
<p><a href="http://careers.stackoverflow.com/jobs/28723/web-developer-stack-exchange-stack-exchange" target="_blank">Web Developer (NYC or telecommute)</a></p>
<p><a href="http://careers.stackoverflow.com/jobs/24481/product-designer-stack-exchange">Senior Product Designer (NYC or telecommute)</a></p>
<p><a href="http://stackexchange.com/about/hiring/sales-representative-account-executive-london" target="_blank">Sales Representative / Account Executive (London)</a></p>
<p><a href="http://stackexchange.com/about/hiring/sales-representative-account-executive-denver" target="_blank">Sales Representative / Account Executive (Denver)</a></p>
<p><a href="http://stackexchange.com/about/hiring/sales-representative-account-executive-new-york" target="_blank">Sales Representative / Account Executive (NYC)</a></p>
<p><a href="http://stackexchange.com/about/hiring/senior-account-executive-digital-advertising-sales">Senior Account Executive, Digital Ad Sales (NYC)</a></p>
<p><a href="http://stackexchange.com/about/hiring/community-manager-new-york" target="_blank">Community Manager (NYC)</a></p>
<p><a href="http://stackexchange.com/about/hiring/community-manager-telecommute" target="_blank">Community Manager (telecommute)</a></p>
<p><a href="http://stackexchange.com/about/hiring/customer-and-sales-support-agent-london">Customer &amp; Sales Support Agent (London)</a></p>
<p><a href="http://stackexchange.com/about/hiring/customer-and-sales-support-agent-denver">Customer &amp; Sales Support Agent (Denver)</a></p>
<p><a href="http://stackexchange.com/about/hiring/inbound-marketing-manager">Inbound Marketing Manager (NYC)</a></p>
<p><a href="http://stackexchange.com/about/hiring/marketing-manager-emea">Marketing Manager, EMEA (London)</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2013/04/get-to-know-the-new-stack-employees/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>12</slash:comments>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Introducing our Careers 2.0 Employer Resource Center</title>
		<link>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2013/04/introducing-our-careers-2-0-employer-resource-center/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2013/04/introducing-our-careers-2-0-employer-resource-center/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 15 Apr 2013 20:47:15 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Bethany Marzewski</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[announcement]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[careers]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.stackoverflow.com/?p=13251</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[When we launched Careers 2.0 back in 2011, we set out with a goal: make the job search process better for the millions of programmers who visit our site every month. Part of achieving this goal is educating employers about what you want from them. In the past, our annual user survey helped us help [...]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2011/02/careers-2-0-launches/">When we launched Careers 2.0 back in 2011</a>, we set out with a goal: make the job search process better for the millions of programmers who visit our site every month. Part of achieving this goal is educating employers about what <em>you</em> want from them. In the past, our <a href="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2013/01/2012-stack-overflow-user-survey-results/">annual user survey</a> helped us help companies change the way they found and hired programmers, while <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Smart-Gets-Things-Done-Technical/dp/1590598385">Joel’s book on how to find the best technical talent</a> and his talk on <a href="http://www.ereexpo.com/2012spring/speakers/3993/">how to stand out and attract top talent</a> are a few other examples of how we&#8217;ve worked to educate tech companies on what you really want. </p>
<p>Today, we’re taking this one step further:</p>
<h2><a href="http://careers.stackoverflow.com/resources">Announcing the Employer Resource Center on Careers 2.0<br />
<img src="http://i.stack.imgur.com/OunjM.png" alt="screenshot of the employer resource center"></a></h2>
<p>Employers are having a really hard time getting programmers to work for them &mdash; hardly a day goes by without another article, blog post or Tweet attesting to this. A study last year found that as many as <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/03/13/it-skills-gap-study_n_1341385.html">93% of employers</a> find a disparity between the technical skills required and the level of the talent they’re able to find while recruiting. As a result, talented programmers are in incredibly high demand, putting you in a position to demand the best jobs, perks, and benefits. </p>
<p>In the <a href="http://careers.stackoverflow.com/resources">Employer Resource Center</a>, we offer advice on best practices, recruitment news and trends, case studies and product guides to help employers with developer hiring. We’ll be updating the content regularly (mostly via the new <a href="http://blog.careers.stackoverflow.com/">Careers 2.0 blog</a>), so check back often! If you have any tips you think employers should know about hiring developers, please leave a note in the comments below. </p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Podcast #46 &#8211; The Podcast That Sounds Dirty But Isn&#8217;t</title>
		<link>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2013/03/podcast-46-the-podcast-that-sounds-dirty-but-isnt/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2013/03/podcast-46-the-podcast-that-sounds-dirty-but-isnt/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 27 Mar 2013 21:14:59 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alex Miller</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[podcasts]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.stackoverflow.com/?p=13238</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Our guest this week (after she joins a bit late) is Zuly Gonzalez &#8211; Stack Exchange moderator and power user.  As usual, we also have David Fullerton, Jay Hanlon, Joel Spolsky and (Fake) Producer Alex! Things are a mess over here, not just because we have to remember to stop masticating long enough to talk [...]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Our guest this week (after she joins a bit late) is Zuly Gonzalez &#8211; Stack Exchange moderator and power user.  As usual, we also have David Fullerton, Jay Hanlon, Joel Spolsky and (Fake) Producer Alex!</p>
<ul>
<li>Things are a mess over here, not just because we have to remember to stop masticating long enough to talk about podcast things. We&#8217;re moving offices! The office is full of crates into which we have to pack all our stuff before we move.</li>
<li>The new office is going to be awesome. It has hexagonal offices, and we don&#8217;t remember if we&#8217;ve talked about this before.</li>
<li>We have three chefs competing to be the chef for the new Stack Exchange office, and it&#8217;s apparently a very desirable position, because they keep bribing Joel with treats.</li>
<li>What&#8217;s really going on? Our <a href="http://tridion.stackexchange.com/">Tridion</a> site went into public beta. It&#8217;s different from <a href="http://magento.stackexchange.com/">the one that sounds like Magneto</a>!</li>
<li>For very small and/or very new sites, Joel thinks it might be useful to be able to email opted-in users every time a new question comes in.</li>
<li>Let&#8217;s talk about the new user homepage, shall we? It&#8217;s exciting! We&#8217;ve been doing a lot of work about new user experience, and the homepage new users now see will finally be optimized for helping them figure out what to do next.</li>
<li>Meanwhile, our guest has arrived! Welcome, <a href="http://answers.onstartups.com/users/2692/zuly-gonzalez">Zuly</a>! She&#8217;s a moderator on <a href="http://answers.onstartups.com/">OnStartups</a> as well as a co-founder of <a href="http://lightpointsecurity.com/">Light Point Security</a>, a web security startup that provides malware protection through the use of cloud-based web browsing.</li>
<li>Zuly walks us through some of the history of OnStartups, the things that make the site work really well and ways in which the site could be improved.</li>
<li>So what&#8217;s the prognosis? Zuly would like to see people get more involved with the community aspect of the site, and with moderation.</li>
<li>Moving on to questions of security. Zuly (and Joel) observe a move in the field of IT Security away from detection and protection against major threats and toward isolation (the Battlestar Galactica defense).</li>
<li>Jay thinks everyone screaming homophobic slurs into Xbox headsets is German. Nobody is completely sure why.</li>
<li>Jay wonders, what about real people? What things should normal people be thinking about in terms of security that most people still don&#8217;t do?</li>
<li>One other very serious question: Is <a href="https://twitter.com/ZulyGonz/status/283671703459086336/photo/1">Zuly&#8217;s dog</a> cuter than <a href="https://twitter.com/spolsky/status/310049502901989377/photo/1">Joel&#8217;s dog</a>? Dog Talk ensues!</li>
<li>Time to discuss a Meta question: <a href="http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/171763/how-can-we-stop-premature-deletion">how can we stop premature deletion</a>?</li>
</ul>
<p>That&#8217;s a wrap! You&#8217;ve been listening to Stack Exchange Podcast #46 with special guest Zuly Gonzalez and the rest of the regular gang! Join us next time from our brand new podcast studio &#8211; it&#8217;s going to be awesome (but the podcast will still be terrible).</p>
<p>&nbsp;<br />
<iframe width="100%" height="166" scrolling="no" frameborder="no" src="http://w.soundcloud.com/player/?url=http%3A%2F%2Fapi.soundcloud.com%2Ftracks%2F85215663&#038;show_artwork=true"></iframe><br />
&nbsp;</p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2013/03/podcast-46-the-podcast-that-sounds-dirty-but-isnt/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>11</slash:comments>
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		<itunes:duration>0:52:32</itunes:duration>
		<itunes:subtitle>Our guest this week (after she joins a bit late) is Zuly Gonzalez &#8211; Stack Exchange moderator and power user.  As usual, we also have David Fullerton, Jay Hanlon, Joel Spolsky and (Fake) Producer Alex!

Things are a mess over here, not just bec[...]</itunes:subtitle>
		<itunes:summary>Our guest this week (after she joins a bit late) is Zuly Gonzalez &#8211; Stack Exchange moderator and power user.  As usual, we also have David Fullerton, Jay Hanlon, Joel Spolsky and (Fake) Producer Alex!

Things are a mess over here, not just because we have to remember to stop masticating long enough to talk about podcast things. We&#8217;re moving offices! The office is full of crates into which we have to pack all our stuff before we move.
The new office is going to be awesome. It has hexagonal offices, and we don&#8217;t remember if we&#8217;ve talked about this before.
We have three chefs competing to be the chef for the new Stack Exchange office, and it&#8217;s apparently a very desirable position, because they keep bribing Joel with treats.
What&#8217;s really going on? Our Tridion site went into public beta. It&#8217;s different from the one that sounds like Magneto!
For very small and/or very new sites, Joel thinks it might be useful to be able to email opted-in users every time a new question comes in.
Let&#8217;s talk about the new user homepage, shall we? It&#8217;s exciting! We&#8217;ve been doing a lot of work about new user experience, and the homepage new users now see will finally be optimized for helping them figure out what to do next.
Meanwhile, our guest has arrived! Welcome, Zuly! She&#8217;s a moderator on OnStartups as well as a co-founder of Light Point Security, a web security startup that provides malware protection through the use of cloud-based web browsing.
Zuly walks us through some of the history of OnStartups, the things that make the site work really well and ways in which the site could be improved.
So what&#8217;s the prognosis? Zuly would like to see people get more involved with the community aspect of the site, and with moderation.
Moving on to questions of security. Zuly (and Joel) observe a move in the field of IT Security away from detection and protection against major threats and toward isolation (the Battlestar Galactica defense).
Jay thinks everyone screaming homophobic slurs into Xbox headsets is German. Nobody is completely sure why.
Jay wonders, what about real people? What things should normal people be thinking about in terms of security that most people still don&#8217;t do?
One other very serious question: Is Zuly&#8217;s dog cuter than Joel&#8217;s dog? Dog Talk ensues!
Time to discuss a Meta question: how can we stop premature deletion?

That&#8217;s a wrap! You&#8217;ve been listening to Stack Exchange Podcast #46 with special guest Zuly Gonzalez and the rest of the regular gang! Join us next time from our brand new podcast studio &#8211; it&#8217;s going to be awesome (but the podcast will still be terrible).
&#160;

&#160;</itunes:summary>
		<itunes:keywords>podcasts</itunes:keywords>
		<itunes:author>The Stack Exchange Team</itunes:author>
		<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
		<itunes:block>no</itunes:block>
	</item>
		<item>
		<title>Podcast #45 &#8211; Keeping it Sharp</title>
		<link>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2013/03/podcast-45-keeping-it-sharp/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2013/03/podcast-45-keeping-it-sharp/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 18 Mar 2013 23:30:26 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alex Miller</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[podcasts]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.stackoverflow.com/?p=13233</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Our guest this week is Eric Lippert &#8211; language architect extraordinaire and famous for all his work at Microsoft in developing their languages Eric joined Microsoft right out of college and was originally working on VB It&#8217;s time for everyone&#8217;s favorite game: Name the Worst Feature of that Microsoft Technology! If you&#8217;re a non-programmer and [...]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Our guest this week is Eric Lippert &#8211; language architect extraordinaire and famous for all his work at Microsoft in developing their languages</p>
<ul>
<li>Eric joined Microsoft right out of college and was originally working on VB</li>
<li>It&#8217;s time for everyone&#8217;s favorite game: Name the Worst Feature of that Microsoft Technology!</li>
<li>If you&#8217;re a non-programmer and still listening, make sure to email us for your free prize</li>
<li>Eric now builds &#8220;<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Static_program_analysis">static analysis</a>&#8221; programs which actually means something real when he&#8217;s talking about it</li>
<li>We actually have some listener questions this week!</li>
<li>First up &#8211; what problems with C# would Eric fix with magical genie powers?</li>
<li>But wait, there&#8217;s a second one he wants to change too!</li>
<li>David has some interesting stuff to talk about! Make sure to check out <a href="http://sustainability.stackexchange.com/">Sustainable Living</a></li>
<li>Check out the meta question (its a problem we have to deal with a lot): <a href="http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/166566/lots-of-not-always-useful-but-well-intentioned-answers">Lots of not-always-useful but well-intentioned answers</a></li>
<li>A public service announcement: <a href="http://imgur.com/gallery/EUfLMg6">please don&#8217;t forget how to dog</a></li>
<li>Make sure to check out Eric&#8217;s great blog at EricLippert.com</li>
<li>Our designer Jin points out that Eric is not only a contributor to Stack Exchange, but also to the popular tumblr: <a href="http://programmerryangosling.tumblr.com/post/15197379385">Programmer Ryan Gosling</a></li>
</ul>
<p>Join us next week!<br />
<iframe src="http://w.soundcloud.com/player/?url=http%3A%2F%2Fapi.soundcloud.com%2Ftracks%2F83835972&amp;show_artwork=true" height="166" width="100%" frameborder="no" scrolling="no"></iframe></p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2013/03/podcast-45-keeping-it-sharp/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>18</slash:comments>
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		<itunes:duration>0:56:15</itunes:duration>
		<itunes:subtitle>Our guest this week is Eric Lippert &#8211; language architect extraordinaire and famous for all his work at Microsoft in developing their languages

Eric joined Microsoft right out of college and was originally working on VB
It&#8217;s time for eve[...]</itunes:subtitle>
		<itunes:summary>Our guest this week is Eric Lippert &#8211; language architect extraordinaire and famous for all his work at Microsoft in developing their languages

Eric joined Microsoft right out of college and was originally working on VB
It&#8217;s time for everyone&#8217;s favorite game: Name the Worst Feature of that Microsoft Technology!
If you&#8217;re a non-programmer and still listening, make sure to email us for your free prize
Eric now builds &#8220;static analysis&#8221; programs which actually means something real when he&#8217;s talking about it
We actually have some listener questions this week!
First up &#8211; what problems with C# would Eric fix with magical genie powers?
But wait, there&#8217;s a second one he wants to change too!
David has some interesting stuff to talk about! Make sure to check out Sustainable Living
Check out the meta question (its a problem we have to deal with a lot): Lots of not-always-useful but well-intentioned answers
A public service announcement: please don&#8217;t forget how to dog
Make sure to check out Eric&#8217;s great blog at EricLippert.com
Our designer Jin points out that Eric is not only a contributor to Stack Exchange, but also to the popular tumblr: Programmer Ryan Gosling

Join us next week!
</itunes:summary>
		<itunes:keywords>podcasts</itunes:keywords>
		<itunes:author>The Stack Exchange Team</itunes:author>
		<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
		<itunes:block>no</itunes:block>
	</item>
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		<title>VOTE NOW in the 2013 Stack Overflow Moderator Election</title>
		<link>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2013/03/2013-so-moderator-election/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2013/03/2013-so-moderator-election/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 08 Mar 2013 22:01:30 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Shog9</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[announcement]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[stackoverflow]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.stackoverflow.com/?p=13208</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[It’s time once again to cast your vote for the next Stack Overflow moderators. The primaries have just ended, and the top ten candidates can be found here: http://stackoverflow.com/election. Why more moderators? We&#8217;re running the election now (rather than a year from the last election in June) because veteran moderator Tim Post is stepping down [...]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>It’s time once again to cast your vote for the next Stack Overflow moderators. The primaries have just ended, and the top ten candidates can be found here: <b><a href="http://stackoverflow.com/election/4?tab=election">http://stackoverflow.com/election</a></b>.</p>
<h2>Why more moderators?</h2>
<p>We&#8217;re running the election <i>now</i> (rather than a year from the last election in June) because veteran moderator <a href="http://stackoverflow.com/users/50049/tim-post">Tim Post</a> is stepping down in order to work with us as a Community Manager! While we’re extremely lucky to have his hard-working brilliance brought to bear on the problems we face managing <a href="http://stackexchange.com/sites">all these sites</a>, his transition does create an immediate need for a replacement on the SO mod team.</p>
<p>But of course, we’d be running an election soon anyway; as amazing as <a href="http://stackoverflow.com/users?tab=moderators">the current Stack Overflow moderators</a> are, the workload continues to grow:<br />
<img alt="" src="http://i.stack.imgur.com/SpsPO.png" width="700" title="scale starts at 20K for DRAMATIC EFFECT" /></p>
<h2>What moderators do</h2>
<p>Jeff laid out the basic philosophy in <a href="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2009/05/a-theory-of-moderation/">A Theory of Moderation</a>:</p>
<blockquote><p><b>Moderators are human exception handlers</b>, there to deal with those (hopefully rare) exceptional conditions that should not <i>normally</i> happen, but when they do, they can bring your entire community to a screaming halt — <i>if</i> you don’t have human exception handling in place.</p></blockquote>
<p>As the previous graph indicates, <i>flags</i> &#8211; the primary embodiment of those exceptions &#8211; are a fairly frequent occurrence on Stack Overflow, purely because of its size. That said, a lot of flags aren&#8217;t identifying things that are particularly <i>exceptional</i>: in particular, posts that need to be closed (duplicates, off-topic questions, etc) or are of extremely poor quality aren&#8217;t all that uncommon on a site that gets over 7000 new questions and 11K answers each day. While moderators are well-equipped to handle these <i>quickly</i>, they don&#8217;t actually <i>require</i> moderators when a sufficient number of experienced users are willing and able to help.</p>
<h2>The effects of improved community moderation tools</h2>
<p><a href="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2012/06/2012-stack-overflow-community-moderator-election-begins/">I mentioned last year</a> that we were working on tools that would help to distribute the load more evenly between the elected moderators and the community as a whole. Well, <a href="http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/139536/new-feature-community-review-tasks-now-in-beta">eight months after their introduction</a>, I’m happy to report that the revamped Review system is doing exactly that:</p>
<p><img alt="" src="http://i.stack.imgur.com/fpBPJ.png" width="700" /></p>
<p>As Jeff wrote:</p>
<blockquote><p>We designed the <a href="http://stackexchange.com/sites">Stack Exchange network</a> engine to be mostly self-regulating, in that we amortize the overall moderation cost of the system across thousands of teeny-tiny slices of effort contributed by regular, everyday users.</p></blockquote>
<p>That’s <em>not</em> empty rhetoric &#8211; on a site the size of Stack Overflow, it’s <strong>absolutely essential</strong>. Geoff Dalgas came up with the design for the new review system based on his observations of wikiHow’s <a href="http://www.wikihow.com/Special:CommunityDashboard">Community Dashboard</a>: individual tasks, each focused on a specific need with specific actions to be taken and specific guidance provided for new users. The philosophy: don’t just give people stuff to do &#8211; help them learn how to do it.</p>
<p>Geoff, Emmett and Kevin have done some amazing work in making these new tools as fast and effective as possible; while there have been some growing pains and a few unexpected challenges, it’s great to see folks jumping in to help so enthusiastically. In the past 30 days, we’ve seen:</p>
<ul>
<li>9384 suspected <a href="http://stackoverflow.com/review/low-quality-posts/stats">low-quality</a> posts cleared, 1608 deleted, 319 edited.</li>
<li>30339 <a href="http://stackoverflow.com/review/suggested-edits/stats">suggested edits</a> approved, 15497 rejected, 4949 improved</li>
<li>17434 <a href="http://stackoverflow.com/review/close/stats">posts that&#8217;d been voted or flagged for closure</a> closed, 3308 left open, 376 edited</li>
<li>571 <a href="http://stackoverflow.com/review/reopen/stats">posts reopened</a>, 2203 left closed, 56 edited</li>
</ul>
<p>(a detailed breakdown of actions to first posts and late answers can be found <a href="http://meta.stackoverflow.com/q/170697">here</a>.)</p>
<p>That’s a lot of work being done by a lot of people&#8230; Heady stuff. To be sure, that still leaves a huge amount of work for elected moderators, but I think it demonstrates the ability of the whole community to step up and assist when the opportunity is provided, that thousands of you are still willing and able to work together to created and maintain the site that you want to be a part of.</p>
<p>So as you go to cast your votes today, looking over <a href="http://elections.stackexchange.com/#stackoverflow">each candidate’s stats</a> and reflecting on <a href="http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/170715/february-2013-moderator-election-town-hall-chat-digest">what they’d do as a moderator</a>&#8230; Remember that moderation doesn’t <em>start</em> with winning an election.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Podcast #44 &#8211; This Should Have Been #43</title>
		<link>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2013/03/podcast-44-this-should-have-been-43/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2013/03/podcast-44-this-should-have-been-43/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 06 Mar 2013 19:51:14 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alex Miller</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[podcasts]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.stackoverflow.com/?p=13206</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Welcome Back!  Our guest today is the one and only Robert Scoble &#8211; blogger and video maker extraordinaire.  He&#8217;s joined by the usual Stack Exchange crew for a packed hour of fun. Robert is a geek who gets around and meets startups and tech innovators. He&#8217;s calling from Flipboard&#8216;s headquarters in Palo Alto, CA. Joel wonders [...]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div>
<p>Welcome Back!  Our guest today is the one and only Robert Scoble &#8211; blogger and video maker extraordinaire.  He&#8217;s joined by the usual Stack Exchange crew for a packed hour of fun.</p>
<ul>
<li>Robert is a geek who gets around and meets startups and tech innovators. He&#8217;s calling from <a href="http://flipboard.com/" target="_blank">Flipboard</a>&#8216;s headquarters in Palo Alto, CA. Joel wonders if Flipboard is just kind of an echo chamber, but it certainly is not! As with much of the internet, your experience with Flipboard depends on who and what you choose to Follow and Like on your social networks.</li>
<li>Facebook Graph Search seems cool so far, but you can&#8217;t quite yet search for single friends who are Ruby programmers, or programmers at all. (You also can&#8217;t do that on <a href="http://careers.stackoverflow.com/" target="_blank">Careers</a>, but that&#8217;s because you can&#8217;t use marital status in hiring decisions.)</li>
<li>Stack Exchange maintains its own servers instead of hosting all our stuff on Amazon or something. Why? How? We walk through the reasoning.</li>
<li>Robert is writing a book with co-author Shel Israel. (They published another book previously called <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Naked-Conversations-Changing-Businesses-Customers/dp/047174719X" target="_blank">Naked Conversations</a>.) It&#8217;s called <i>Age of Context</i>. The number and quality of sensors and wearable computers and databases and social media activity is increasing wildly these days.</li>
<li><a href="http://tempo.ai/" target="_blank">Tempo</a> is a smart calendar from the lab that created Siri (and other amazing projects). Apps like Tempo (and <a href="http://www.google.com/landing/now/" target="_blank">Google Now</a>) are the future of getting you all the information you need before you even know you need it.</li>
<li>What else is new? Robert is waiting for Google Glasses, and he&#8217;s got the<a href="http://www.mybasis.com/" target="_blank">Basis</a> watch. Tempo and Mailbox have reservation systems to combat the huge scaling problems that arise when things get tens of thousands of users in the first hour after launch.</li>
<li>What else is going on? There&#8217;s a new Chromebook coming out, but Robert is saving his money for Google Glasses.</li>
<li>Apple doesn&#8217;t have the best-of-breed apps anymore. They don&#8217;t have the right software people, and they don&#8217;t know enough about us. Is this Tim Cook&#8217;s fault? Unclear! Apple&#8217;s secrecy is putting it at a disadvantage against the Amazons and the Googles of today.</li>
<li>We have a user-submitted question! <a href="http://meta.stackoverflow.com/users/139121/steven-smethurst" target="_blank">Steven</a> who wants to know how many edits a normal answer typically gets.</li>
<li>By the way, if you want to submit a question for an upcoming podcast, hop over to <a href="http://s.tk/podcastquestions" target="_blank">s.tk/podcastquestions</a>. The best picture of a Siberian Husky gets a t-shirt!</li>
<li>That&#8217;s all, folks! You can find Robert as Scobleizer on probably any website in the entire world.  Make sure to tune in for the next episode when we have even more fun guests!</li>
<li><a href="https://twitter.com/horse_ebooks" target="_blank">Also, This is a really important twitter account that you should check out</a>.</li>
</ul>
<p><iframe src="http://w.soundcloud.com/player/?url=http%3A%2F%2Fapi.soundcloud.com%2Ftracks%2F82092950&amp;show_artwork=true" height="166" width="100%" frameborder="no" scrolling="no"></iframe>
</div>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2013/03/podcast-44-this-should-have-been-43/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>7</slash:comments>
			<enclosure url="http://www.podtrac.com/pts/redirect.mp3/feeds.soundcloud.com/stream/82092950-stack-exchange-stack-exchange-podcast-44.mp3" length="59510528" type="audio/mpeg" />
		<itunes:duration>1:01:59</itunes:duration>
		<itunes:subtitle>
Welcome Back!  Our guest today is the one and only Robert Scoble &#8211; blogger and video maker extraordinaire.  He&#8217;s joined by the usual Stack Exchange crew for a packed hour of fun.

Robert is a geek who gets around and meets startups and [...]</itunes:subtitle>
		<itunes:summary>
Welcome Back!  Our guest today is the one and only Robert Scoble &#8211; blogger and video maker extraordinaire.  He&#8217;s joined by the usual Stack Exchange crew for a packed hour of fun.

Robert is a geek who gets around and meets startups and tech innovators. He&#8217;s calling from Flipboard&#8216;s headquarters in Palo Alto, CA. Joel wonders if Flipboard is just kind of an echo chamber, but it certainly is not! As with much of the internet, your experience with Flipboard depends on who and what you choose to Follow and Like on your social networks.
Facebook Graph Search seems cool so far, but you can&#8217;t quite yet search for single friends who are Ruby programmers, or programmers at all. (You also can&#8217;t do that on Careers, but that&#8217;s because you can&#8217;t use marital status in hiring decisions.)
Stack Exchange maintains its own servers instead of hosting all our stuff on Amazon or something. Why? How? We walk through the reasoning.
Robert is writing a book with co-author Shel Israel. (They published another book previously called Naked Conversations.) It&#8217;s called Age of Context. The number and quality of sensors and wearable computers and databases and social media activity is increasing wildly these days.
Tempo is a smart calendar from the lab that created Siri (and other amazing projects). Apps like Tempo (and Google Now) are the future of getting you all the information you need before you even know you need it.
What else is new? Robert is waiting for Google Glasses, and he&#8217;s got theBasis watch. Tempo and Mailbox have reservation systems to combat the huge scaling problems that arise when things get tens of thousands of users in the first hour after launch.
What else is going on? There&#8217;s a new Chromebook coming out, but Robert is saving his money for Google Glasses.
Apple doesn&#8217;t have the best-of-breed apps anymore. They don&#8217;t have the right software people, and they don&#8217;t know enough about us. Is this Tim Cook&#8217;s fault? Unclear! Apple&#8217;s secrecy is putting it at a disadvantage against the Amazons and the Googles of today.
We have a user-submitted question! Steven who wants to know how many edits a normal answer typically gets.
By the way, if you want to submit a question for an upcoming podcast, hop over to s.tk/podcastquestions. The best picture of a Siberian Husky gets a t-shirt!
That&#8217;s all, folks! You can find Robert as Scobleizer on probably any website in the entire world.  Make sure to tune in for the next episode when we have even more fun guests!
Also, This is a really important twitter account that you should check out.


</itunes:summary>
		<itunes:keywords>podcasts</itunes:keywords>
		<itunes:author>The Stack Exchange Team</itunes:author>
		<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
		<itunes:block>no</itunes:block>
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		<item>
		<title>Max, Oded, Wendy, Val, Shefali, and Mike: Welcome to the Family!</title>
		<link>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2013/02/max-oded-wendy-val-shefali-and-mike-welcome-to-the-family/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2013/02/max-oded-wendy-val-shefali-and-mike-welcome-to-the-family/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 25 Feb 2013 19:45:28 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Joe Humphries</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[background]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.stackoverflow.com/?p=13169</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[We&#8217;ve been busy hiring more of the most talented people on the planet! Three cheers for the newest employees at Stack Exchange: Max Horstmann, Web Developer (Careers 2.0) New York Max joins Stack Exchange as a developer on the Careers team. Originally from Denzlingen, Germany, he previously worked on the Windows team at Microsoft. On [...]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>We&#8217;ve been busy hiring more of the most talented people on the planet! Three cheers for the newest employees at Stack Exchange:</p>
<p><strong><a href="http://stackoverflow.com/users/189572/max"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-13170" style="border: 1px solid black;margin-right: 2em" alt="" src="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/wp-content/uploads/Horstmann-Max.jpg" width="200" height="200" /></a>Max Horstmann, Web Developer (Careers 2.0)</strong></p>
<p><em>New York</em></p>
<p><em></em>Max joins Stack Exchange as a developer on the Careers team. Originally from Denzlingen, Germany, he previously worked on the Windows team at Microsoft. On a recent one-year career break, he and his wife had a chance to travel to glaciers in South America, deserts in the Middle East, and jungles in Southeast Asia. His mission for the next five years is to sort all the pictures taken on this trip, write a few more mobile apps, and find out which German bar in New York City plays the best <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DzNP1SNxR24" target="_blank">Blasmusik</a>.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><strong><a href="http://stackoverflow.com/users/1583/oded"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-13172" style="border: 1px solid black;margin-right: 2em" alt="" src="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/wp-content/uploads/Coster-Oded1.jpg" width="200" height="201" /></a>Oded Coster, Web Developer (Core)</strong></p>
<p><em>London</em></p>
<p>A long time Stack Overflow user and contributor (Beta badge, baby!), Oded is highly familiar with the ins and outs of Stack Overflow and promises not to introduce too many bugs. Originally from Jerusalem, Israel, he now lives in London, England with his wife and two children.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><strong><img class="alignleft  wp-image-13173" style="border: 1px solid black;margin-right: 2em" alt="" src="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/wp-content/uploads/Paler-Wendy.jpg" width="200" height="210" />Wendy Paler, Account Executive</strong></p>
<p><em>New York</em></p>
<p>Wendy grew up in Wisconsin and has been living in New York for over five years.  She is very excited to move into the tech field as a member of the Stack Exchange team. Outside of work, you might find Wendy sharing a delicious meal with friends in a restaurant, checking out a concert, show, or museum, taking a spin or yoga class, or pretending to be a Food Network star in her Brooklyn kitchen.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><strong><img class="alignleft  wp-image-13174" style="border: 1px solid black;margin-right: 2em" alt="" src="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/wp-content/uploads/Perez-Valentina.jpg" width="202" height="203" />Valentina Perez, Office Manager</strong></p>
<p><em>London<strong></strong></em></p>
<p>Val was born in Argentina (won&#8217;t eat beef), grew up in Ottawa, Canada (hates snow), and has lived in London for 15 years and couldn&#8217;t imagine living anywhere else. She has a certificate in Web Application Development from the Open University, and is mega excited to have the opportunity to work for Stack Overflow and set up the way the new London office will be run. On her spare time Val is part of the Jeerios, the jeerleading squad for the London Rollergirls. She also loves music, dancing, baking, and dinosaurs.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><strong><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-13191" style="border: 1px solid black;margin-right: 2em" alt="" src="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/wp-content/uploads/Shah-Shefali.jpg" width="200" height="201" /></strong><strong>Shefali Shah, Sales Representative</strong></p>
<p><em>Denver</em></p>
<p>Hailing from the bustling city of Mumbai, Shefali is an interesting mix of the East-and-West. Armed with a BS in Business Admin with an emphasis in Finance and Entrepreneurship from CU Boulder, she is excited to join and contribute to the Stack Exchange team. On the weekends you will find Shefali dancing with her East Indian Dance Company all over Colorado, or just catching a meal or a flick with her homies around town.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><strong><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-13192" style="border: 1px solid black;margin-right: 2em" alt="" src="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/wp-content/uploads/Hardy-Mike.jpg" width="200" height="200" />Michael Hardy, Account Executive</strong></p>
<p><em>Denver</em></p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px">Michael is a native of Atlanta, GA who moved to Colorado 11 years ago to go CU Boulder.  He met his wife in while in school and decided to trade humidity for all four seasons and a plethora of microbreweries (Belgium, Aged Sours, Cask Ale… Yes Please!). On the weekends you will find Michael chilling with his family, trying a new breakfast joint, exploring the Rockies and/or playing competitive baseball.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<hr />
<p><em>Visit our <span style="text-decoration: underline"><a href="http://www.stackexchange.com/about/hiring">careers page</a></span> to learn all the reasons Stack Exchange is a ridiculously awesome place to work. </em><em>Want to see your face in our next new hire announcement? Here&#8217;s who we need:</em></p>
<p><a href="http://careers.stackoverflow.com/jobs/28723/web-developer-stack-exchange-stack-exchange" target="_blank">Web Developer (NYC or telecommute)</a></p>
<p><a href="http://careers.stackoverflow.com/jobs/24481/product-designer-stack-exchange" target="_blank">Product Designer (NYC or telecommute)</a></p>
<p><a href="http://stackexchange.com/about/hiring/sales-representative-account-executive-london" target="_blank">Sales Representative / Account Executive (London)</a></p>
<p><a href="http://stackexchange.com/about/hiring/sales-representative-account-executive-denver" target="_blank">Sales Representative / Account Executive (Denver)</a></p>
<p><a href="http://stackexchange.com/about/hiring/sales-representative-account-executive-new-york" target="_blank">Sales Representative / Account Executive (NYC)</a></p>
<p><a href="http://stackexchange.com/about/hiring/community-manager-new-york" target="_blank">Community Manager (NYC)</a></p>
<p><a href="http://stackexchange.com/about/hiring/community-manager-telecommute" target="_blank">Community Manager (telecommute)</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2013/02/max-oded-wendy-val-shefali-and-mike-welcome-to-the-family/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>24</slash:comments>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Podcast #43 &#8211; False Facts &amp; Blood Feuds</title>
		<link>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2013/02/podcast-43-false-facts-blood-feuds/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2013/02/podcast-43-false-facts-blood-feuds/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 21 Feb 2013 18:31:19 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alex Miller</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[podcasts]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.stackoverflow.com/?p=13165</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Welcome to Stack Exchange Podcast #43 with Joel Spolsky, Jay Hanlon, David Fullerton, and special guest Alexis Ohanian, calling in from the Tutorspree office. Alexis is the co-founder of Reddit and an investor in Hipmunk. He&#8217;s a strong advocate against SOPA and PIPA, and knows how to dress well while doing so, thanks to Joel. (Listen on to figure out what [...]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Welcome to Stack Exchange Podcast #43 with Joel Spolsky, Jay Hanlon, David Fullerton, and special guest <a href="http://alexisohanian.com/" target="_blank">Alexis Ohanian</a>, calling in from the <a href="http://www.tutorspree.com/" target="_blank">Tutorspree</a> office. Alexis is the co-founder of <a href="http://reddit.com/" target="_blank">Reddit</a> and an investor in <a href="http://hipmunk.com/" target="_blank">Hipmunk</a>. He&#8217;s a strong advocate against SOPA and PIPA, and knows how to dress well while doing so, thanks to Joel. (Listen on to figure out what we&#8217;re talking about here.)</p>
<ul>
<li>Talking about subreddits: Alexis wanted tags to categorize content coming into Reddit, but his co-founder <a href="http://www.reddit.com/user/spez" target="_blank">Steve Huffman</a> pushed for subreddits. Alexis tells us why and how it works as well as it does. (Joel has <a href="http://www.reddit.com/r/joel" target="_blank">his own subreddit!</a> And it was the first one ever!)</li>
<li>Alexis has a book coming out in the fall called <i>Without Their Permission</i>. &#8220;Their&#8221; refers to gatekeepers &#8211; people who stand between people and access to information. He also has <a href="http://www.hyperink.com/Make-Something-People-Love-Lessons-From-A-Startup-Guy-b1478">another book</a> already out.</li>
<li>So what&#8217;s the next annoying thing that Washington is going to do to stymy innovation? The <a href="https://www.eff.org/issues/tpp" target="_blank">Trans Pacific Partnership Agreement</a> is on the horizon. We dive into the wonderful world of software patent law.</li>
<li>Per Joel: Amazon&#8217;s 1-Click is the only thing that should have a patent. Nothing else needs one.</li>
<li>Let&#8217;s move on to copyright! Or get distracted and continue talking about patents! Just kidding, we successfully moved on to copyright (and how it relates to wishing someone a joyful anniversary of their birth).</li>
<li>We also decided that Creative Commons needs to come up with a better open source birthday song. (Also, copyright should not be granted to anything Jay doesn&#8217;t like.)</li>
<li>Moving on: Kickstarter and friends. The connected web is changing the way people make things and sell them to other people who want to experience them. (Alexis Ohanian&#8217;s project <a href="http://breadpig.com/" target="_blank">Breadpig</a> is one of the companies leading the charge in this area.)</li>
<li>Back to Reddit. Alexis walks us through the way Reddit works as a communication platform, and how the team handles &#8220;unwanted&#8221;, but legal, speech (spoiler alert: they try to avoid censorship). Sometimes you find yourself in the tough position of having to defend reperehensible, but legal, ideas. Sometimes, though, <a href="http://jezebel.com/5946643/reddit-users-attempt-to-shame-sikh-woman-get-righteously-schooled" target="_blank">someone can learn something</a>.</li>
<li>Oh, and finally: Alexis was supposed to eat a spoonful of cinnamon on the podcast today. New rule for podcast guests! Alexis says it&#8217;s impossible, but he&#8217;s discovered that he does indeed have some cinnamon accessible to him…</li>
</ul>
<p>See you next week!</p>
<p>&nbsp;<br />
<iframe width="100%" height="166" scrolling="no" frameborder="no" src="http://w.soundcloud.com/player/?url=http%3A%2F%2Fapi.soundcloud.com%2Ftracks%2F80236224&#038;show_artwork=true"></iframe><br />
&nbsp;</p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2013/02/podcast-43-false-facts-blood-feuds/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>6</slash:comments>
			<enclosure url="http://www.podtrac.com/pts/redirect.mp3/feeds.soundcloud.com/stream/80236224-stack-exchange-stack-exchange-podcast-43.mp3" length="56772992" type="audio/mpeg" />
		<itunes:duration>0:59:08</itunes:duration>
		<itunes:subtitle>Welcome to Stack Exchange Podcast #43 with Joel Spolsky, Jay Hanlon, David Fullerton, and special guest Alexis Ohanian, calling in from the Tutorspree office. Alexis is the co-founder of Reddit and an investor in Hipmunk. He&#8217;s a strong advocat[...]</itunes:subtitle>
		<itunes:summary>Welcome to Stack Exchange Podcast #43 with Joel Spolsky, Jay Hanlon, David Fullerton, and special guest Alexis Ohanian, calling in from the Tutorspree office. Alexis is the co-founder of Reddit and an investor in Hipmunk. He&#8217;s a strong advocate against SOPA and PIPA, and knows how to dress well while doing so, thanks to Joel. (Listen on to figure out what we&#8217;re talking about here.)

Talking about subreddits: Alexis wanted tags to categorize content coming into Reddit, but his co-founder Steve Huffman pushed for subreddits. Alexis tells us why and how it works as well as it does. (Joel has his own subreddit! And it was the first one ever!)
Alexis has a book coming out in the fall called Without Their Permission. &#8220;Their&#8221; refers to gatekeepers &#8211; people who stand between people and access to information. He also has another book already out.
So what&#8217;s the next annoying thing that Washington is going to do to stymy innovation? The Trans Pacific Partnership Agreement is on the horizon. We dive into the wonderful world of software patent law.
Per Joel: Amazon&#8217;s 1-Click is the only thing that should have a patent. Nothing else needs one.
Let&#8217;s move on to copyright! Or get distracted and continue talking about patents! Just kidding, we successfully moved on to copyright (and how it relates to wishing someone a joyful anniversary of their birth).
We also decided that Creative Commons needs to come up with a better open source birthday song. (Also, copyright should not be granted to anything Jay doesn&#8217;t like.)
Moving on: Kickstarter and friends. The connected web is changing the way people make things and sell them to other people who want to experience them. (Alexis Ohanian&#8217;s project Breadpig is one of the companies leading the charge in this area.)
Back to Reddit. Alexis walks us through the way Reddit works as a communication platform, and how the team handles &#8220;unwanted&#8221;, but legal, speech (spoiler alert: they try to avoid censorship). Sometimes you find yourself in the tough position of having to defend reperehensible, but legal, ideas. Sometimes, though, someone can learn something.
Oh, and finally: Alexis was supposed to eat a spoonful of cinnamon on the podcast today. New rule for podcast guests! Alexis says it&#8217;s impossible, but he&#8217;s discovered that he does indeed have some cinnamon accessible to him…

See you next week!
&#160;

&#160;</itunes:summary>
		<itunes:keywords>podcasts</itunes:keywords>
		<itunes:author>The Stack Exchange Team</itunes:author>
		<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
		<itunes:block>no</itunes:block>
	</item>
		<item>
		<title>Podcast #42 &#8211; It&#8217;s The Exception That Proves The Rule</title>
		<link>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2013/02/podcast-42-2/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2013/02/podcast-42-2/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 05 Feb 2013 19:45:51 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alex Miller</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[podcasts]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.stackoverflow.com/?p=13150</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Welcome to Stack Exchange Podcast #42 &#8211; it&#8217;s our usual gang back this week with Joel, Jay, David, and Producer Alex.  There&#8217;s plenty of inside baseball, so put on your rally caps and make sure to stick it through to the end! David Mamet, apparently. Jay was a drama major. Michael forgot to pay the [...]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Welcome to Stack Exchange Podcast #42 &#8211; it&#8217;s our usual gang back this week with Joel, Jay, David, and Producer Alex.  There&#8217;s plenty of inside baseball, so put on your rally caps and make sure to stick it through to the end!</p>
<ul>
<li>David Mamet, apparently. Jay was a drama major.</li>
<li>Michael forgot to pay the Google bill, so our hangouts are back down to 10 person limits (but it&#8217;s fixed now!)</li>
<li>We have one big thing to talk about that made a change and generated controversy. Joel correctly guesses what it is: we no longer display your accept rate (the percentage of questions you asked that you accepted an answer for).</li>
<li>The team walks us through this feature&#8217;s history and the rationale for removing it. (As soon as we shut it off, the temperature in New York plummeted. This is related.)</li>
<li>Enjoy our <i>hilariously awkward pause</i></li>
<li>Jeff Atwood recommended <a href="http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/165179/replace-accept-rate-with-citizenship-level" target="_blank">replacing the accept rate with some kind of citizenship score</a>. Will this just cause the same problems as the accept rate? How can we get around the problem of ridiculing people for low &#8220;citizenship scores&#8221;? People will learn how to game anything, after all &#8211; remember flag weight?</li>
<li>David wonders why we need a third number at all. We already have your reputation and your badges on your little user card. Those already show how good of a citizen you are.</li>
<li>Finally, this is something we&#8217;re still looking at, so let us know your thoughts on <a href="http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/165179/replace-accept-rate-with-citizenship-level" target="_blank">the meta post</a>.</li>
<li>Site milestones! We have some good ones this week. Our <a href="http://magento.stackexchange.com/" target="_blank">Magento</a> site went live (not to be confused with <a href="http://fc09.deviantart.net/fs11/i/2006/238/0/0/Erik_Magnus_Magneto_Colors_by_ErikVonLehmann.jpg" target="_blank">Mag<i>ne</i>to</a>). This one is remarkable because it&#8217;s something nobody in the company knows anything about, but it got created anyway.</li>
<li>Congratulations to <a href="http://mathematics.stackexchange.com/" target="_blank">Math</a> for being the first non-Trilogy site to hit 100,000 questions! Our hosts discuss the Math site and its relationships with other sites on the network for a while.</li>
<li>One more new site to go over: <a href="http://ell.stackexchange.com/" target="_blank">English Language Learners</a>. David and Joel don&#8217;t really understand this site, so Jay tells us what&#8217;s going on (hint: it&#8217;s not about an X-Men villain). ELL should help relieve some stress from <a href="http://english.stackexchange.com/" target="_blank">English Language and Usage</a>, which was frustrated by the high number of certain types of questions that were coming in.</li>
<li>Is this podcast the exception that proves the rule?</li>
<li>Another site milestone: we have finally rolled out the final design of <a href="http://travel.stackexchange.com/" target="_blank">our Travel site</a>. (It was blocked for a while because Joel had strong opinions about the original design.) When you finish listening to this podcast, go to <a href="http://travel.stackexchange.com/" target="_blank">Travel</a> and ask or answer a question!</li>
<li><a href="http://stackexchange.com/newsletters" target="_blank">Subscribe to your favorite site&#8217;s newsletter</a>!</li>
<li>On to our next topic. We are changing some things with how duplicates work. We want to make it more positive! (It&#8217;s the [you lucky bastard] close reason.) This is the first closing change, and it&#8217;s going out in the next week or so.</li>
</ul>
<p>Well that&#8217;s the podcast for this week!  <strong></strong>Thanks for tuning in, and now for our standard disclaimers:</p>
<h6><em>This podcast is not sponsored by self-driving car manufacturer Audible.com. Alexis Ohanian did not invent the DVR. YouTube is the place where you go to watch <a href="http://www.cinnamonchallenge.com/" target="_blank">kids eat cinnamon</a>. Join us next week when Alexis Ohanian eats a spoonful of cinnamon! Alex is not fired because correlation definitely implies causation.</em></h6>
<p><iframe src="https://w.soundcloud.com/player/?url=http%3A%2F%2Fapi.soundcloud.com%2Ftracks%2F77975208" height="166" width="100%" frameborder="no" scrolling="no"></iframe></p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2013/02/podcast-42-2/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>12</slash:comments>
			<enclosure url="http://www.podtrac.com/pts/redirect.mp3/feeds.soundcloud.com/stream/77975208-stack-exchange-stack-exchange-podcast-42.mp3" length="52168832" type="audio/mpeg" />
		<itunes:duration>0:54:20</itunes:duration>
		<itunes:subtitle>Welcome to Stack Exchange Podcast #42 &#8211; it&#8217;s our usual gang back this week with Joel, Jay, David, and Producer Alex.  There&#8217;s plenty of inside baseball, so put on your rally caps and make sure to stick it through to the end!

David[...]</itunes:subtitle>
		<itunes:summary>Welcome to Stack Exchange Podcast #42 &#8211; it&#8217;s our usual gang back this week with Joel, Jay, David, and Producer Alex.  There&#8217;s plenty of inside baseball, so put on your rally caps and make sure to stick it through to the end!

David Mamet, apparently. Jay was a drama major.
Michael forgot to pay the Google bill, so our hangouts are back down to 10 person limits (but it&#8217;s fixed now!)
We have one big thing to talk about that made a change and generated controversy. Joel correctly guesses what it is: we no longer display your accept rate (the percentage of questions you asked that you accepted an answer for).
The team walks us through this feature&#8217;s history and the rationale for removing it. (As soon as we shut it off, the temperature in New York plummeted. This is related.)
Enjoy our hilariously awkward pause
Jeff Atwood recommended replacing the accept rate with some kind of citizenship score. Will this just cause the same problems as the accept rate? How can we get around the problem of ridiculing people for low &#8220;citizenship scores&#8221;? People will learn how to game anything, after all &#8211; remember flag weight?
David wonders why we need a third number at all. We already have your reputation and your badges on your little user card. Those already show how good of a citizen you are.
Finally, this is something we&#8217;re still looking at, so let us know your thoughts on the meta post.
Site milestones! We have some good ones this week. Our Magento site went live (not to be confused with Magneto). This one is remarkable because it&#8217;s something nobody in the company knows anything about, but it got created anyway.
Congratulations to Math for being the first non-Trilogy site to hit 100,000 questions! Our hosts discuss the Math site and its relationships with other sites on the network for a while.
One more new site to go over: English Language Learners. David and Joel don&#8217;t really understand this site, so Jay tells us what&#8217;s going on (hint: it&#8217;s not about an X-Men villain). ELL should help relieve some stress from English Language and Usage, which was frustrated by the high number of certain types of questions that were coming in.
Is this podcast the exception that proves the rule?
Another site milestone: we have finally rolled out the final design of our Travel site. (It was blocked for a while because Joel had strong opinions about the original design.) When you finish listening to this podcast, go to Travel and ask or answer a question!
Subscribe to your favorite site&#8217;s newsletter!
On to our next topic. We are changing some things with how duplicates work. We want to make it more positive! (It&#8217;s the [you lucky bastard] close reason.) This is the first closing change, and it&#8217;s going out in the next week or so.

Well that&#8217;s the podcast for this week!  Thanks for tuning in, and now for our standard disclaimers:
This podcast is not sponsored by self-driving car manufacturer Audible.com. Alexis Ohanian did not invent the DVR. YouTube is the place where you go to watch kids eat cinnamon. Join us next week when Alexis Ohanian eats a spoonful of cinnamon! Alex is not fired because correlation definitely implies causation.
</itunes:summary>
		<itunes:keywords>podcasts</itunes:keywords>
		<itunes:author>The Stack Exchange Team</itunes:author>
		<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
		<itunes:block>no</itunes:block>
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		<title>Why We (Still) Believe in Working Remotely</title>
		<link>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2013/02/why-we-still-believe-in-working-remotely/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2013/02/why-we-still-believe-in-working-remotely/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 01 Feb 2013 19:43:01 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>David Fullerton</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[background]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.stackoverflow.com/?p=13121</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[It’s 2013, almost three years after we first raised money and started growing beyond the first four employees. At the time, Jeff wrote a great blog post about working remotely, basically laying out our plan for how we were going to make it work. Now we’re a few years in and it’s time to update [...]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>It’s 2013, almost three years after we first raised money and started growing beyond <a href="http://stackoverflow.com/u/1">the</a> <a href="http://stackoverflow.com/u/2">first</a> <a href="http://stackoverflow.com/u/3">four </a><a href="http://stackoverflow.com/u/4">employees</a>. At the time, Jeff wrote a <a href="http://www.codinghorror.com/blog/2010/05/on-working-remotely.html">great blog post</a> about working remotely, basically laying out our plan for how we were going to make it work. Now we’re a few years in and it’s time to update it with, well, what actually happened.</p>
<p>First, where are we now? Stack Exchange now employs 75 people, roughly evenly split between sales (and sales ops and marketing) and product (development, ops, design, community management). The product side is where our remote working happens: we have 16 full-time remote and 18 in-office developers, sysadmins, designers, and community managers. So we are very much a hybrid team, which I’ve come to believe is the best of both worlds. I’m the lead of engineering, so I’m mostly going to talk about developers, but a lot of this applies to other positions as well.</p>
<h1 style="margin: 2em 0 1em;">Why we believe in letting people work full-time from home</h1>
<p><b>#1: It lets you hire good people who can’t move.</b> Hiring remotely opens you up to an enormous pool of people who can’t move. I can’t stress this enough: <i>for every one person who is in your location or is happy to move there, there are 100 more who are not.</i> They’re tied down by a spouse with a job, a kid in school, a visa they can’t get, or a mortgage they can’t get out of. <b>If you’re hiring for technical positions, hiring remotely is the best-kept, blindingly obvious secret for finding people.</b> By hiring remotely, we have been able to fill our team with awesome people with lots of experience, who were <s>stuck in</s> happily living in places like <a href="http://stackoverflow.com/users/2/geoff-dalgas">Corvallis, Oregon</a> or <a href="http://stackoverflow.com/users/23354/marc-gravell">Forest of Dean, UK</a> (Seriously, look it up. It’s basically The Shire.)</p>
<p><b>#1a: You don’t lose people to silly things like their significant other going to medical school.</b> Before I worked at Stack Exchange, I worked at Fog Creek. I watched at least five great people leave because their family situation made it necessary to move, and Fog Creek had (at the time) a strict no-remote-workers policy. <b>This drove me crazy.</b> These were amazing employees, in whom the company had already invested deeply, who were now walking out the door because they couldn’t live in New York any more. At Stack Exchange, we’ve already had two people move away from New York, who are still happily employed doing the same job they were always doing. If we didn’t allow working remotely, we’d be down at least two great developers.</p>
<p><b>#2: When done right, it makes people extremely productive.</b> Private office? Check. Flexible hours? Check. Short commute? Check. I’ll let you in on a secret: most of our remote developers work longer hours than our in-office devs. It’s not required, and probably won’t always be the case, but when going to work is as simple as walking upstairs (pants optional, but recommended) people just tend to put in more hours and work more productively.</p>
<p><b>#3: It makes you focus on more than butts in chairs.</b> As a manager, I can’t easily know how many hours each person on my team is working. This is actually good for me because it <i>forces me to look at what they’ve done.</i> It’s good for the remote person as well: they can’t fool themselves into thinking that just because they’re in an office, surfing Reddit for an hour is work. In a perfect world we’d both already have this perspective, but it’s amazing how easy it is to delude yourself into thinking that “going to the office” = work.</p>
<h1 style="margin: 2em 0 1em;">What we’ve learned</h1>
<p><b>#1: Remote working isn’t for everyone.</b> There’s a tendency to think that working from home is all sunshine and rainbows and working in your PJs. <a href="http://theoatmeal.com/comics/working_home">It’s not</a>. You miss out on being around people (which wears even on introverts), doing fun stuff like playing ping-pong or having lunch together, and (sometimes hardest of all) you lose a clear distinction between work and the rest of your life. Some people thrive when working from home, while others wither or just&#8230; drift. We’ve had people move both ways: remote people deciding to come in to the office, and people in the office deciding to go remote. The key, for us, is offering both and helping people decide which is best for them.</p>
<p><b>#2: Working remotely is a skill you need to hire for.</b> If remote working isn’t for everyone, you better be sure that the person you’re hiring to work remotely is going to be good at it. The most important thing that we look for is that <strong>they must be self-motivating and proactive</strong>: self-motivating in finding things to do, proactive in communicating with the rest of the team. Our remote developers are some of the most argumentative people in the whole company, because we hired them to be that way. We like opinionated people. Opinionated people find things they care about to work on and make sure you know what they think, which is essential if you’re not sharing an office together.</p>
<p><b>#3: You have to commit to it as a team (and a company).</b> There’s no halfsies in a distributed team. If even one person on the team is remote, every single person has to start communicating online. The locus of control and decision making must be outside of the office: no more dropping in to someone’s office to chat, no more rounding people up to make a decision. All of that has to be done online <em>even if the remote person isn’t around</em>. Otherwise you’ll slowly choke off the remote person from any real input on decisions.</p>
<p><b>#4: Communication is hard (but it was always hard).</b> I am far from the first to point it out, but the hardest problem in growing a company from 4 to 75 people (and, presumably, to 200) is communication. When there were 4 people, everyone knew everything. When there are 75 people that no longer scales. So you have to work out your channels of communication, and that’s doubly true with remote workers because you can’t rely on overheard conversations or gossip to spread the word. You have to force yourself to be explicit in communication.</p>
<h1 style="margin: 2em 0 1em;">How we do it</h1>
<p><b>#1: Google Hangouts.</b> Google hangouts are the lifeblood of our organization. If you haven’t tried them for video chat, you’re living in the Stone Age. We have persistent hangouts for every team available at URLs that everyone knows. We spin up one-off hangouts for quick video chats. We use them for meetings, for hanging out (no, seriously), for demos, for teaching&#8230; for everything. There really is no substitute for face-to-face conversations, and when you get to the point where people in the office are actually preferring hangouts to talking in-person because it’s easier, you know you’re on to something.</p>
<p><b>#2: Persistent Chat.</b> Chat is good for shorter conversations, or quick pings to ask someone a question. It has two big benefits: (1) it’s asynchronous enough that people can get back to you when they have a second, and (2) it’s persistent, so other people can skim it and catch up on what they missed (vital when you’re in different time zones). Every company should have a chat system, whether they have a distributed team or not. It’s better than interrupting someone at their desk or dragging someone into a hangout for a quick question. We <a href="http://chat.stackoverflow.com/">built our own chat system</a>, but there are good alternatives like Campfire and HipChat out there.</p>
<p><b>#3: Email.</b> As <a href="http://www.codinghorror.com/blog/2008/11/is-email-efail.html">flawed as email is</a>, it’s still alive and kicking. Email is for fully asynchronous communication (don’t use email if you need a response <em>today</em>), and for communicating status updates and decisions. We have a standing rule that all decisions must be typed up and shared with the rest of the team via email, basically <a href="http://www.codinghorror.com/blog/2010/05/on-working-remotely.html">what Jeff described at the beginning</a>. Each team sends out a weekly status update to the whole company giving a high-level overview of what’s going on, so teams don’t get isolated from one another.</p>
<p><b>#4: Trello + Google Docs.</b> We use <a href="http://trello.com/">Trello</a> for keeping track of who is working on what, and Google Docs for notes, specs, designs, etc. Both are excellent tools that you should use even if you’re not working remotely.</p>
<h1 style="margin: 2em 0 1em;">That’s our story</h1>
<p>Distributed teams aren’t for everyone, but they are working extremely well for us. Yes, they are more work, but for us it is easily worth it because of the quality of people we get and the quality of life we’re able to offer them. For us, it’s been a part of our DNA from the beginning and something we’re committed to making work long-term. Will it still work when we hit 500 employees? I don’t know, but I’m excited to find out.</p>
<h1 style="margin: 2em 0 1em;">Did I mention we’re hiring?</h1>
<p>Sound like the kind of place you’d like to work? <a href="http://stackexchange.com/about/hiring">We’re hiring</a>, especially <a href="http://careers.stackoverflow.com/jobs/28723/web-developer-stack-exchange-stack-exchange">developers</a> and <a href="http://careers.stackoverflow.com/jobs/24481/product-designer-stack-exchange">designers</a>. We’re still figuring it all out, but we’ve got a <a href="http://stackexchange.com/about/team">great team</a> and some really interesting problems to work on. Come be a part of figuring out what the future of remote working looks like.</p>
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		<title>About Page 2.0: The QuickStartening</title>
		<link>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2013/01/about-page-2-0-the-quickstartening/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2013/01/about-page-2-0-the-quickstartening/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 29 Jan 2013 22:04:42 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Jay Hanlon</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[announcement]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.stackoverflow.com/?p=12972</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[We&#8217;ve just rolled out a new Quick Start guide to help new users learn the basics. Here’s one example, but you can find any site&#8217;s version by going to sitename.com/about. Imagine you&#8217;re visiting a new friend&#8217;s home and&#8230; &#8220;Please, make yourself at home. Oh, actually, could you not sit on that? Yes, it looks like [...]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>We&#8217;ve just rolled out a new Quick Start guide to help new users learn the basics. Here’s <a title="AskDifferent Quick Start guide" href="http://askdifferent.com/about" target="_blank">one example</a>, but you can find any site&#8217;s version by going to sitename.com<b>/about</b>.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><a href="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/wp-content/uploads/2013-01-28_20-36-00.jpeg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-13011" title="Ironically, this hovertext is just the kind of distraction we don't like." alt="2013-01-28_20-36-00" src="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/wp-content/uploads/2013-01-28_20-36-00.jpeg" width="1019" height="602" /></a></p>
<h2>Imagine you&#8217;re visiting a new friend&#8217;s home and&#8230;</h2>
<blockquote><p>&#8220;Please, make yourself at home. Oh, actually, could you not sit on that? Yes, it <em>looks</em> like a couch. That’s what makes it so avant-garde. But it’s actually art. Whoah, careful there, too &#8211; I see your confusion, as that does <em>resemble</em> a doorknob, but it’s actually a very small furnace. And &#8211; I’m sorry, but &#8211; could you NOT use a coaster? We’re testing the effects of wet drinks on finished wood, and coaster usage generates noise in our data.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
<p>When you&#8217;re surrounded by familiar things, but using them the way you normally do leads to different, negative outcomes, it&#8217;s extremely disorienting.</p>
<h2>At Stack Exchange, &#8220;weird&#8221; is a feature, not a bug.</h2>
<p>Our sites are different. And that difference is deliberate. The things that confuse folks who are used to forums, or those <a title="I dare you to click here and read the first ten questions you see." href="http://answers.yahoo.com" target="_blank">broad, “ask anything” sites</a> are the very things that we believe make us work <em>better</em>.</p>
<div id="attachment_13037" class="wp-caption alignright" style="width: 310px"><a href="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/wp-content/uploads/2013-01-29_09-53-17.png"><img class="size-medium wp-image-13037  " title="I did NOT photoshop these page numbers." alt="I'm a little embarrassed I couldn't turn this up sooner." src="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/wp-content/uploads/2013-01-29_09-53-17-300x154.png" width="300" height="154" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">I&#8217;m a little embarrassed I couldn&#8217;t turn this up sooner.</p></div>
<p>For us, different is good. Just like my mommy always told me. But it&#8217;s still jarring. And when it&#8217;s too jarring, potentially valuable contributors are put off and leave. They didn’t get help, and we lost an expert. Being jarring came at a high cost.</p>
<h2>Easing them into our weirdness.</h2>
<p>To mitigate new users&#8217; frustration, we need a page that can do three things:</p>
<p><strong>1. Describe just the ways that we&#8217;re <em>different</em>.</strong></p>
<p>We don&#8217;t bother telling users about the things that are similar to the other sites they&#8217;ve used. Instead, we focus on the delta &#8211; the things that are likely to be surprises to them. For example:</p>
<ul>
<li>Posts are collaboratively edited</li>
<li>Chit chat and pure discussion are generally not welcome</li>
<li>Some things that <em>sound</em> a lot like what&#8217;s on topic are expressly off-topic here, and questions about those things get closed.</li>
</ul>
<p style="text-align: center;"><a href="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/wp-content/uploads/2013-01-30_10-57-541.png"><img class="size-full wp-image-13103 aligncenter" title="It's not you, it's us.  Discussions are awesome.  They just don't fit our format that well." alt="2013-01-30_10-57-54" src="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/wp-content/uploads/2013-01-30_10-57-541.png" width="1036" height="221" /></a></p>
<p>Now, obviously, users could just discover these things as they use the site, but however much you do or don’t grok our system, <a title="Joel Spolsky on making apps to do what users expect." href="http://www.joelonsoftware.com/uibook/chapters/fog0000000058.html">surprises suck</a>. Most of life&#8217;s surprises fall closer to the kind involving gum discoveries in improbable locations than the ones that come in pony-shaped boxes. Whatever you think about a rule&#8217;s merit, learning about it <em>after you’ve broken it</em> tends to adversely impact your view of it. There’s a big difference between giving your wife a poem you wrote her, only to recieve a red-lined markup, complete with suggestions as to how to be less derivative, and having her edit one that you’re hoping to submit to a journal after she offered to give you feedback.</p>
<p><strong>2. Explain <em>why</em> we’re different. </strong></p>
<p><strong></strong>If you’re going to <a title="CodingHorror's most recent on usability books." href="http://www.codinghorror.com/blog/2010/03/index.html" target="_blank">make someone think</a>, or god forbid, try to change the way they do something, you damn well better convince them there’s a good reason.</p>
<ul>
<li><em>Why</em> allow users to edit each other&#8217;s posts? Because it makes the average quality of our content higher than sites where responses are limited to a single user’s experiences.</li>
<li><em>Why </em>edit out harmless chit chat? Because we want to make the best answers <em>more findable</em><em> </em>than they are in traditional forums.</li>
</ul>
<p>If you tell someone you don&#8217;t allow chit-chat, but you fail to give them <em>the reason,</em> the first time they have their “thank you!” deleted as noise, they&#8217;re less likely to think about our “answer findability optimization” than our &#8220;tendency toward pedantic, manners-hating fascism”.</p>
<p><strong>3. Get them to actually read it.</strong></p>
<p>Research tells us that pages like this are <em>significantly</em> less effective if no one reads them. The challenge is that, surprisingly, most people who arrive at a website with a problem to solve do not seem to have the following first instinct:</p>
<blockquote><p><strong><em>“I wonder if they have any detailed, hopefully exhaustive documentation that covers their rules, best practices and societal mores. I&#8217;d just love to read it in its entirety before trying to get help with my problem!&#8221;</em></strong></p></blockquote>
<div id="attachment_13026" class="wp-caption alignright" style="width: 192px"><a href="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/wp-content/uploads/ShowCover.aspx_1.jpeg"><img class=" wp-image-13026      " title="Second edition includes a new chapter on how to meet your soul mate in YouTube comment threads." alt="Does it cover typing in boxes on websites?  That's what I need to learn about." src="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/wp-content/uploads/ShowCover.aspx_1.jpeg" width="182" height="228" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Does it cover typing in boxes on websites? That&#8217;s what I need to learn about.</p></div>
<p>Now, I do realize that some non-trivial portion of <em>this</em> blog&#8217;s audience is like us, and is thinking that that&#8217;s actually exactly what we might do. Which is why we love you so much. But, most people, even most experts, are not like us. Please trust me when I tell you this:</p>
<p><em><strong>Most people <span style="text-decoration: underline;">do not</span> believe they should need to expand their education in any way whatsoever prior to typing in a box on the internet.</strong></em></p>
<p>They just don’t. So, if you want any shot at getting them to read a primer, you need to make it easy on the eyes, and keep it to a length that respects their time, rather than one that implies that they may need to secure some provisions or sled dogs prior to proceeding.</p>
<p>So, we pared it to just those topics that were absolutely necessary for a new user to get started successfully. Which was the hardest part; it’s <em>much</em> easier to be comprehensive than brief. Some of our choices may surprise you, but they all resulted from analysis, testing, and discussion. “Tags? Really?” Yep, we felt the same way. Until we did some user testing and almost every single user on the non-tech sites expressed some variation of the following:</p>
<blockquote><address><strong>&#8220;You said I had to add a tag. I didn’t even know what a tag WAS, but I used my context clues and I figured it out. And added one. And now it&#8217;s telling me that I NEED MORE REPUTATION TO CREATE NEW &amp;*%$ing tags. I hope a rock falls on you. A heavy one.”</strong></address>
</blockquote>
<p>Tagging may not seem like something a new user needs to be thinking about, but it&#8217;s actually critical because almost invariably, they get it wrong. The same is true for comments and even editing. The subject-matter experts who do stick around long enough to make a few mistakes will learn, but often after frustrating themselves &#8211; and site regulars &#8211; in the process. Knowing roughly what to expect going in should help to ease the transition for all involved.</p>
<p>Which is good, because we can’t afford to have a site&#8217;s next Jon Skeet wasting his time casting geologic hexes on me, when we really need him to focus his energy on answering questions. Hopefully, this guide will help.</p>
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		<title>Podcast #41 &#8211; Neither of Us Have Muscles</title>
		<link>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2013/01/podcast-41-neither-of-us-have-muscles/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2013/01/podcast-41-neither-of-us-have-muscles/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 28 Jan 2013 18:33:01 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alex Miller</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[podcasts]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.stackoverflow.com/?p=12982</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Welcome to Stack Exchange Podcast #41, featuring Joel Spolsky, Jay Hanlon, David Fullerton, Kyle Brandt, Nick Craver, and Geoff Dalgas, with Producer Alex calling in from Denver!  We have a bunch of systems administrators and the like here, because we are in the process of moving datacenters to our new home in New York City. [...]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Welcome to Stack Exchange Podcast #41, featuring Joel Spolsky, Jay Hanlon, David Fullerton, Kyle Brandt, Nick Craver, and Geoff Dalgas, with Producer Alex calling in from Denver!  We have a bunch of systems administrators and the like here, because we are in the process of moving datacenters to our new home in New York City.</p>
<ul>
<li>So what&#8217;s involved in the move? We hired movers to do all the de-racking and truck driving, so the work done by SE employees involved laying everything out and then wiring it back up.</li>
<li>We&#8217;ve got all sorts of people underfoot this week who came in from all around the country to work on the new datacenter. Once it&#8217;s complete, we&#8217;ll fail back over to NY from Oregon, <a href="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2012/11/se-podcast-36-we-got-hit-by-a-hurricane/" target="_blank">where we&#8217;ve been since Hurricane Sandy</a>. There are still some issues to work out before we can do that, though.</li>
<li>Due to some of these issues, we are switching over to SQL 2012… tonight! Craver takes us step by step through how we&#8217;re going to manage that process.</li>
<li>So what else are we talking about? How about the new about page! We rolled out <a href="http://stackoverflow.com/about" target="_blank">a new about page</a>, and you should check it out. Jay and David walk us through it.</li>
<li>The <a href="http://trello.com/" target="_blank">Trello</a> team got <a href="https://twitter.com/trello/status/291284923606765568">Trello-themed fortune cookies </a>shipped to their office, which is awesome.</li>
<li>Another feature that went out this week is the ability to upload your own profile picture instead of using Gravatar. <a href="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2013/01/announcing-a-new-way-to-change-your-profile-picture/" target="_blank">Read about it</a> and go upload your picture! (No animated gifs allowed.)</li>
<li>Speaking of animating things, we also think the profile page needs a little simplifying, among other things. (Joel has noticed a few very simplified Q&amp;A copycats cropping up that just have a few of our hallmarks, and missing the in-depth stuff that makes a community.)</li>
<li>Let&#8217;s look at some interesting meta questions! <a href="http://meta.robotics.stackexchange.com/questions/153/is-it-ok-to-ask-for-opinions" target="_blank">Is it okay to ask for opinions</a>?</li>
<li>Speaking of questions like that, we&#8217;re not completely happy with the &#8220;not constructive&#8221; close reason. How do we know what kind of questions we want? <a href="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2010/09/good-subjective-bad-subjective/" target="_blank">Good Subjective, Bad Subjective</a> helps, but the situation still gets tricky.</li>
<li>Sometimes the answer determines whether the question was good subjective or bad subjective. There&#8217;s a great example of this <a href="http://english.stackexchange.com/questions/78690/white-orange-or-orange-white-which-color-comes-first" target="_blank">on English</a>. (Joel says it was a great question to begin with.)</li>
<li>As we&#8217;ve been investigating closed questions, we&#8217;ve found some interesting observations about the process of closing questions and conditioning our users.</li>
<li>So &#8220;too localized&#8221; is overused and misused, so we are looking at ways to tweak and improve the closing system so it will be less frustrating but continue teaching new users the things they need to learn about our sites.</li>
<li>One thing we&#8217;re working on is tweaks and improvements to the close and reopen queues. Tune in next podcast for some of the other options we&#8217;re considering!</li>
<li>We talk about the reopen queue for a really long time.  Also, close votes have an aging process. David talks us through the problems with it.</li>
<li>This podcast is now at the top of the close queue.</li>
</ul>
<p>We&#8217;ll see you next week for another exciting episode of&#8230;.. The Stack Exchange Podcast!<br />
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		<itunes:duration>1:04:04</itunes:duration>
		<itunes:subtitle>Welcome to Stack Exchange Podcast #41, featuring Joel Spolsky, Jay Hanlon, David Fullerton, Kyle Brandt, Nick Craver, and Geoff Dalgas, with Producer Alex calling in from Denver!  We have a bunch of systems administrators and the like here, because [...]</itunes:subtitle>
		<itunes:summary>Welcome to Stack Exchange Podcast #41, featuring Joel Spolsky, Jay Hanlon, David Fullerton, Kyle Brandt, Nick Craver, and Geoff Dalgas, with Producer Alex calling in from Denver!  We have a bunch of systems administrators and the like here, because we are in the process of moving datacenters to our new home in New York City.

So what&#8217;s involved in the move? We hired movers to do all the de-racking and truck driving, so the work done by SE employees involved laying everything out and then wiring it back up.
We&#8217;ve got all sorts of people underfoot this week who came in from all around the country to work on the new datacenter. Once it&#8217;s complete, we&#8217;ll fail back over to NY from Oregon, where we&#8217;ve been since Hurricane Sandy. There are still some issues to work out before we can do that, though.
Due to some of these issues, we are switching over to SQL 2012… tonight! Craver takes us step by step through how we&#8217;re going to manage that process.
So what else are we talking about? How about the new about page! We rolled out a new about page, and you should check it out. Jay and David walk us through it.
The Trello team got Trello-themed fortune cookies shipped to their office, which is awesome.
Another feature that went out this week is the ability to upload your own profile picture instead of using Gravatar. Read about it and go upload your picture! (No animated gifs allowed.)
Speaking of animating things, we also think the profile page needs a little simplifying, among other things. (Joel has noticed a few very simplified Q&#38;A copycats cropping up that just have a few of our hallmarks, and missing the in-depth stuff that makes a community.)
Let&#8217;s look at some interesting meta questions! Is it okay to ask for opinions?
Speaking of questions like that, we&#8217;re not completely happy with the &#8220;not constructive&#8221; close reason. How do we know what kind of questions we want? Good Subjective, Bad Subjective helps, but the situation still gets tricky.
Sometimes the answer determines whether the question was good subjective or bad subjective. There&#8217;s a great example of this on English. (Joel says it was a great question to begin with.)
As we&#8217;ve been investigating closed questions, we&#8217;ve found some interesting observations about the process of closing questions and conditioning our users.
So &#8220;too localized&#8221; is overused and misused, so we are looking at ways to tweak and improve the closing system so it will be less frustrating but continue teaching new users the things they need to learn about our sites.
One thing we&#8217;re working on is tweaks and improvements to the close and reopen queues. Tune in next podcast for some of the other options we&#8217;re considering!
We talk about the reopen queue for a really long time.  Also, close votes have an aging process. David talks us through the problems with it.
This podcast is now at the top of the close queue.

We&#8217;ll see you next week for another exciting episode of&#8230;.. The Stack Exchange Podcast!
</itunes:summary>
		<itunes:keywords>podcasts</itunes:keywords>
		<itunes:author>The Stack Exchange Team</itunes:author>
		<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
		<itunes:block>no</itunes:block>
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		<title>2012 Stack Overflow User Survey Results</title>
		<link>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2013/01/2012-stack-overflow-user-survey-results/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2013/01/2012-stack-overflow-user-survey-results/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 25 Jan 2013 15:00:40 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Bethany Marzewski</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[background]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[community]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[stackoverflow]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.stackoverflow.com/?p=12948</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[In December, we launched our 3rd annual Stack Overflow Annual User Survey to learn more about our site demographics and user trends throughout 2012. Compared to last year, we received an even larger sample size this year with almost 10,000 respondents! Here are a few larger trends we’ve observed over the past three years: You [...]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In December, we launched our 3<sup>rd</sup> annual Stack Overflow Annual User Survey to learn more about our site demographics and user trends throughout 2012. <a href="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2012/02/survey-results/">Compared to last year</a>, we received an even larger sample size this year with almost 10,000 respondents!</p>
<p>Here are a few larger trends we’ve observed over the past three years:</p>
<p><strong>You like us…you really like us!</strong></p>
<p>Since 2009, site traffic to Stack Overflow has grown by a whopping 261.7%! As if this weren&#8217;t enough, we’re also now the 86<sup>th</sup> largest global site, <a href="http://www.alexa.com/siteinfo/stackoverflow.com">according to Alexa</a>. Our crazy goal of breaking into the top 50 is looking less crazy!</p>
<p><strong>Mobile is on the move.</strong></p>
<p>No real surprise here, but of the mobile family, the number of users who own Android devices increased 29.2% from 2010 to 2012—a bigger increase than owners of iPhones and iPads combined. Despite the rising mobile trend, we were surprised to learn that only 7.7% of you are employed as mobile apps developers and 51.8% of companies still don’t have a mobile app.</p>
<p><strong>You’re getting happier at work.</strong></p>
<p>Since 2010, we’ve seen a 2.2% uptick in workplace satisfaction, so 70% of you are happy in your current jobs. We’re not going to point fingers or anything, but we hope there may be some causation for those of you who found your current job from among the 10,000+ roles that were posted on Careers 2.0 last year.</p>
<p>Since we now have three years’ worth of data, we wanted to put together something a little special for this year’s overview, so check out the infographic below that our designer created to highlight some of our key findings.</p>
<p><a href="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2013/01/2012-stack-overflow-user-survey-results/survey-final-3/" rel="attachment wp-att-12949"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-12949" alt="" src="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/wp-content/uploads/survey-final-3.png" width="650" height="6121" /></a></p>
<p>In our effort to make all information publicly available, here is <a href="https://www.surveymonkey.com/sr.aspx?sm=vU4rF_2bPVQaftSo1s69bGGbvMPXp7ktcfSHiDFP_2bM5qw_3d" target="_blank">a basic report of the results</a> or if you&#8217;d prefer to play around with the data yourself, just email <a href="mailto:alison@stackoverflow.com" target="_blank">alison@stackoverflow.com</a> for the dataset.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><strong>UPDATED: </strong>Check out our <a href="https://www.dropbox.com/s/cenyt88smoa30b0/Stack%20Overflow%20Survey%20Results%20-%20Europe.png">European version of the infographic here</a>.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Announcing a new way to change your profile picture</title>
		<link>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2013/01/announcing-a-new-way-to-change-your-profile-picture/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2013/01/announcing-a-new-way-to-change-your-profile-picture/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 15 Jan 2013 15:46:51 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Jeremy Tunnell</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[announcement]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.stackoverflow.com/?p=12920</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[One of our New Year’s resolutions here at Stack Exchange is to take a hard look at our user experience. As the network has grown and our audience expanded, the system has grown with it &#8211; but there are some rough edges in places that can use a bit of smoothing. You’ll be seeing a [...]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>One of our New Year’s resolutions here at Stack Exchange is to take a hard look at our user experience.  As the network has grown and our audience expanded, the system has grown with it &#8211; but there are some rough edges in places that can use a bit of smoothing. You’ll be seeing a lot of improvements over the next few months, but today I’d like to announce the first bit of polish: built-in profile pictures.</p>
<p>We have used <a href="https://en.gravatar.com/">Gravatar</a> to let you manage your profile picture since roughly <a href="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2008/06/gravatars-identicons-and-you/">six to eight weeks before Stack Overflow entered beta</a>. Gravatar is a wonderful service that lets you use a consistent, recognizable image for yourself across many different services and sites. It’s free, it’s fairly easy to add support for it (which made it a great fit for Stack Overflow in the early days), it doesn’t require any special configuration to make it work on multiple sites (which made it a great fit as Stack Exchange grew) and best of all it supports distinct, recognizable default images for folks who haven’t uploaded their own.</p>
<p>There&#8217;s one problem: if you don&#8217;t have a Gravatar account, you can&#8217;t have a custom picture. One basic bit of personalization turns into Yet Another Username &amp; Password, which is annoying if Stack Exchange is the only place you would ever use it, and somewhat embarrassing considering our support for OpenID means <a href="http://www.codinghorror.com/blog/2008/05/openid-does-the-world-really-need-yet-another-username-and-password.html">you don’t need another set of credentials</a> to use Stack Exchange itself!</p>
<p>So from now on, anyone who wants a custom picture can simply upload one from their computer or the web.  If you hover your mouse over your picture on your profile page, you’ll see a new link to ”change picture”:</p>
<p><img src="http://i.stack.imgur.com/n67sl.png" alt="new change picture option" /></p>
<p>Click on that, click the “Upload a new picture” button, select a picture from your computer (or enter the URL of an image on the web), and finally click the “Upload” button. That’s it.</p>
<p>If you decide to switch back to your Gravatar, you can do that at any time:</p>
<p><img src="http://i.stack.imgur.com/DaUj4.png" alt="selection UI" /></p>
<p>As always, you can have a different picture and bio for each site, or use the button at the bottom of your profile edit page to copy everything network wide. And since we default to Gravatar for profile pictures, your existing photos (or abstract patterns) will remain unchanged until you want them to change.</p>
<p>We would like to thank Alan and team at <a href="http://imgur.com/">Imgur</a> for doing the image hosting and being incredibly helpful during the whole process. They turned what would’ve been a major development effort into something we could roll out in a couple of weeks.</p>
<p>Try it out, and <a href="http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/tagged/profile-picture">let us know what you think on meta</a>!</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Podcast #40 &#8211; Random Musings (Plus a Surprise Guest)</title>
		<link>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2013/01/podcast-40-2/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2013/01/podcast-40-2/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 10 Jan 2013 16:15:18 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alex Miller</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[podcasts]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.stackoverflow.com/?p=12912</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[You&#8217;re listening to the Stack Exchange Podcast #40 (We apologize to everyone who expected Wil Wheaton last week)  Your hosts are David Fullerton, Jay Hanlon, and Joel Spolsky.  We also have a surprise special guest: Britton Payne, professor of Copyright, Trademark, and Emerging Technologies at Fordham University. He knows a lot of things about software [...]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>You&#8217;re listening to the Stack Exchange Podcast #40 (We apologize to everyone who expected Wil Wheaton last week)  Your hosts are David Fullerton, Jay Hanlon, and Joel Spolsky.  We also have a surprise special guest: Britton Payne, professor of Copyright, Trademark, and Emerging Technologies at Fordham University. He knows a lot of things about software patent law, so we grabbed him as he walked by the studio to talk to us.</p>
<ul>
<li>About 15 years ago, Congress passed the Digital Millennium Copyright Act to create some useful guidelines for the new digital landscape. We talk about what actually happens with the DMCA takedown notices, including loophole issues that Joel has discovered.</li>
<li>So that&#8217;s one part of the DMCA. The other one is anti-circumvention technology, and we go through many of the nuances there.</li>
<li>So the technological means of anti-circumvention have to be re-evaluated every now and then. New exemptions were announced in October regarding: ebook reading assisted technologies (like Amazon Kindles being able to read aloud to you); jailbreaking phones (not tablets); and unlocking phone handsets (not tablets).</li>
<li>This has been Copyright Update #1 on the Stack Exchange Podcast, brough to you by Britton Payne!</li>
<li>So what else is going on in the Stack Exchange universe? We just had a holidays! Part of our celebration included <a href="http://winterba.sh/" target="_blank">Winter Bash</a>, which ends &#8220;today&#8221; (at time of recording). You can still <a href="http://winterba.sh/" target="_blank">check out all the details</a>. Give us your thoughts about it <a href="http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/161188/what-do-you-think-of-winter-bash" target="_blank">on Meta</a>.</li>
<li>…including a &#8220;hat&#8221; that was a tribute to Jason Punyon, who is in a rock (jazz and disco, really) band. They played our holiday party at the <a href="http://hotelonrivington.com/" target="_blank">Hotel Rivington</a>, and they were astonishingly good.</li>
<li>We have a couple new sites to talk about - <a href="http://politics.stackexchange.com/" target="_blank">Politics</a> &amp; <a href="http://anime.stackexchange.com/" target="_blank">Anime</a>. Each has just over 250 questions, so they&#8217;re doing okay, for baby sites. We discuss the pitfalls and strengths of each of these new members of our network (especially Politics).</li>
<li>(Somehow we get onto the topic of the <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Hebrew_Israelites" target="_blank">Black Hebrew Israelites</a>.)</li>
<li>Politics is a difficult site to approach, but it&#8217;s not hard to pass the bar of being better than anything else that&#8217;s out there on the internet, and we&#8217;re well on our way to doing that.</li>
<li>We turn to Anime. None of us know very much about anime, but we manage to turn this site into a conversation anyway.</li>
<li>No news is good news, new-office-wise! Construction is constructioning. We&#8217;re moving in March, or so.</li>
<li>There&#8217;s a glimmer in Joel&#8217;s eye called Stack Overflow TV.  They&#8217;ll be broadcast live on the Internet on <a href="http://stackoverflow.tv/" target="_blank">stackoverflow.tv</a>, which we will remember to buy before this podcast is published.</li>
<li>Meth questions! Er, meta questions! First, we tackle &#8220;<a href="http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/160969/how-to-deal-with-a-highly-voted-non-constructive-question" target="_blank">How to deal with a highly voted non-constructive question</a>&#8220;. What&#8217;s the problem with the question mentioned there? How do we solve this? We decide to call them &#8220;pivot questions&#8221;. The conversation leads us to another common type of easy question: &#8220;bike shed&#8221; questions.</li>
<li>While we&#8217;re here, go follow us <a href="http://twitter.com/stackexchange" target="_blank">on Twitter</a> to get the best questions from all of our sites. (It can be a lot to swallow.)</li>
<li>We experimented with automated twitter feeds and with manually curated twitter feeds, and have found limited success with both. We discuss how twitter feeds (and other types of feeds) work for our company and our sites.</li>
</ul>
<p>For you people listening at home: We want to take your questions! Go to <a href="http://s.tk/podcastquestions" target="_blank">s.tk/podcastquestions</a> to record your question for us to play and answer on the air. You can also send us a written message… somehow.</p>
<p>
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]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2013/01/podcast-40-2/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>9</slash:comments>
			<enclosure url="http://www.podtrac.com/pts/redirect.mp3/feeds.soundcloud.com/stream/74385052-stack-exchange-stack-exchange-podcast-40.mp3" length="57108608" type="audio/mpeg" />
		<itunes:duration>0:59:29</itunes:duration>
		<itunes:subtitle>You&#8217;re listening to the Stack Exchange Podcast #40 (We apologize to everyone who expected Wil Wheaton last week)  Your hosts are David Fullerton, Jay Hanlon, and Joel Spolsky.  We also have a surprise special guest: Britton Payne, professor of[...]</itunes:subtitle>
		<itunes:summary>You&#8217;re listening to the Stack Exchange Podcast #40 (We apologize to everyone who expected Wil Wheaton last week)  Your hosts are David Fullerton, Jay Hanlon, and Joel Spolsky.  We also have a surprise special guest: Britton Payne, professor of Copyright, Trademark, and Emerging Technologies at Fordham University. He knows a lot of things about software patent law, so we grabbed him as he walked by the studio to talk to us.

About 15 years ago, Congress passed the Digital Millennium Copyright Act to create some useful guidelines for the new digital landscape. We talk about what actually happens with the DMCA takedown notices, including loophole issues that Joel has discovered.
So that&#8217;s one part of the DMCA. The other one is anti-circumvention technology, and we go through many of the nuances there.
So the technological means of anti-circumvention have to be re-evaluated every now and then. New exemptions were announced in October regarding: ebook reading assisted technologies (like Amazon Kindles being able to read aloud to you); jailbreaking phones (not tablets); and unlocking phone handsets (not tablets).
This has been Copyright Update #1 on the Stack Exchange Podcast, brough to you by Britton Payne!
So what else is going on in the Stack Exchange universe? We just had a holidays! Part of our celebration included Winter Bash, which ends &#8220;today&#8221; (at time of recording). You can still check out all the details. Give us your thoughts about it on Meta.
…including a &#8220;hat&#8221; that was a tribute to Jason Punyon, who is in a rock (jazz and disco, really) band. They played our holiday party at the Hotel Rivington, and they were astonishingly good.
We have a couple new sites to talk about - Politics &#38; Anime. Each has just over 250 questions, so they&#8217;re doing okay, for baby sites. We discuss the pitfalls and strengths of each of these new members of our network (especially Politics).
(Somehow we get onto the topic of the Black Hebrew Israelites.)
Politics is a difficult site to approach, but it&#8217;s not hard to pass the bar of being better than anything else that&#8217;s out there on the internet, and we&#8217;re well on our way to doing that.
We turn to Anime. None of us know very much about anime, but we manage to turn this site into a conversation anyway.
No news is good news, new-office-wise! Construction is constructioning. We&#8217;re moving in March, or so.
There&#8217;s a glimmer in Joel&#8217;s eye called Stack Overflow TV.  They&#8217;ll be broadcast live on the Internet on stackoverflow.tv, which we will remember to buy before this podcast is published.
Meth questions! Er, meta questions! First, we tackle &#8220;How to deal with a highly voted non-constructive question&#8220;. What&#8217;s the problem with the question mentioned there? How do we solve this? We decide to call them &#8220;pivot questions&#8221;. The conversation leads us to another common type of easy question: &#8220;bike shed&#8221; questions.
While we&#8217;re here, go follow us on Twitter to get the best questions from all of our sites. (It can be a lot to swallow.)
We experimented with automated twitter feeds and with manually curated twitter feeds, and have found limited success with both. We discuss how twitter feeds (and other types of feeds) work for our company and our sites.

For you people listening at home: We want to take your questions! Go to s.tk/podcastquestions to record your question for us to play and answer on the air. You can also send us a written message… somehow.

</itunes:summary>
		<itunes:keywords>podcasts</itunes:keywords>
		<itunes:author>The Stack Exchange Team</itunes:author>
		<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
		<itunes:block>no</itunes:block>
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		<title>Winter Bash 2012 Conclusion: Boxing Day</title>
		<link>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2013/01/boxing-day/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2013/01/boxing-day/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 08 Jan 2013 16:00:58 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Aarthi Devanathan</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[background]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[stackexchange]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.stackoverflow.com/?p=12871</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[So. We&#8217;ve torn through the advent calendar, tossed aside all the wrapping paper, and (hopefully) obsessively screencapped our gravatars wearing various kinds of silly hats. As of last Friday, Winter Bash 2012 is officially over! This event was awesome. We had a total of 46,710 users participating across 76 sites, and we gave away 108,924 [...]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>So. We&#8217;ve torn through the advent calendar, tossed aside all the wrapping paper, and (hopefully) obsessively screencapped our gravatars wearing various kinds of silly hats. As of last Friday, <a href="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2012/12/welcome-to-winter-bash-2012/">Winter Bash 2012</a> is officially over!</p>
<p>This event was <i>awesome</i>. We had a total of <b>46,710</b> users participating across <b>76</b> sites, and we gave away <b>108,924</b> hats total. The most common hat was the <a href="http://winterba.sh/and-i-feel-fine"><b>And I Feel Fine</b></a> hat, which <b>23,171</b> users earned for activity on December 21st. The least common hat earned was <b><a href="http://winterba.sh/i-do-say">I Do Say</a></b>, which was obtained by <b><a href="http://stackoverflow.com/users/256196/bohemian">Bohemian</a></b>, on Stack Overflow, and <b><a href="http://gaming.stackexchange.com/users/27134/kalina">kalina</a></b>, on Arqade for posting an <i>epic</i> 30 up-voted questions. Lots and lots of us were able to find all 7 unlockable <a href="http://meta.gaming.stackexchange.com/questions/5653/what-are-the-secret-hats-for-2012">secret hats</a>, and a few even found an <a href="http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/159782/the-mysterious-epic-punyon-beard">eighth</a>. Well done!</p>
<p>Sadly, all good things must come to an end. We&#8217;ve packed up the hats (and archived the JavaScript) until next time. For now, you&#8217;ll be able to see the hats you won (and Jin&#8217;s excellent artwork) on <a href="http://winterba.sh">http://winterba.sh</a>. If you&#8217;re curious to see what hats other people earned, check out <a href="http://winterba.sh/leaderboard">the leaderboard</a>.</p>
<p><a href="http://winterba.sh/leaderboard"><img src="http://i.stack.imgur.com/7MLht.png" /></a></p>
<p>I really loved seeing how you all got creative in making your gravatars work with the hats &#8212; some of which were comically large! Below are a <i>very</i> small number of the hats I enjoyed seeing. There were just too many hats I liked; I have tons and tons of screencaps of users wearing hats in fun, funny, cool, and/or interesting ways.</p>
<p><img src="http://i.stack.imgur.com/4Vdij.png" /></p>
<p>On some sites, even <a href="http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/19738/who-is-the-community-user">the Community ♦ user</a> got into the spirit of things:</p>
<p><img src="http://i.stack.imgur.com/cUXu9.png" /></p>
<p>The best surprise (aside from the little blue circle letting me know I&#8217;d gotten another hat!) was seeing users I didn&#8217;t expect to enjoy hats sporting all sorts of interesting looks. Since Stack Overflow in particular tends to have a stronger &#8220;professional&#8221; focus, I tend to forget that folks who are passionate about their work get just as passionate about having fun now and again. Seeing some top users from all over the network equipping headgear, well, it caught me off guard and made me smile.</p>
<p><img src="http://i.stack.imgur.com/turAN.png" /></p>
<p>Several of you also found the &#8220;easter egg&#8221; on the Winter Bash site &#8212; holding down <kbd>Ctrl</kbd> and collecting all the falling snowflakes revealed a snowy pink unicorn!</p>
<p><img src="http://i.stack.imgur.com/tVSGQ.png" /></p>
<p>
<h2>Real Data</h2>
</p>
<p>One of the things I wanted to look into is how a temporary, high-profile badge can alter behaviors. While some users have mentioned that they stuck around more, was this true at large?</p>
<p>The data are not really clear. Sites with a very high hats-to-users ratio saw serious increases in posts created during this time, visits, and general positive responses from traffic. Straw polls of the moderation teams would seem to indicate that general site upkeep (things like flags, edit queues, and other mod-actions) held stable. Anecdotally, the review queues seemed extra empty, though whether that was because fewer folks were around the sites or because everyone really wanted <a href="http://winterba.sh/le-magritte">Le Magritte</a> isn&#8217;t clear.</p>
<p><img src="http://i.stack.imgur.com/g3BWR.png" /></p>
<p><img src="http://i.stack.imgur.com/weBRS.png" /></p>
<p>I know <i>I</i> consider this event a real success! It&#8217;s been a pleasure seeing everyone get excited, wear silly headgear, and just generally loosen up a bit as the year drew to a close.</p>
<p>Special thanks to Stack Exchange developers <a href="http://stackoverflow.com/users/2749/emmett">Emmett</a> and <a href="http://stackoverflow.com/users/115866/balpha">balpha</a> for building this and keeping it running smoothly, to VP of Engineering <a href="http://stackoverflow.com/users/91687/david-fullerton">David Fullerton</a> for coordination, guidance and encouragement, and to the aforementioned <a href="http://graphicdesign.stackexchange.com/users/3/jin">Jin</a> for the beautiful design work. </p>
<p>
<h2>The Future of Hats</h2>
</p>
<p>I definitely want to try for some things for the next time:</p>
<ul>
<li>Hats in chat has been <a href="http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/159194/can-we-wear-hats-in-chat">requested</a> <a href="http://chat.stackexchange.com/transcript/35?m=7340012#7340012">before</a>. I&#8217;d like to push for this for next year.</li>
<li>Site-specific hats would be super cool. Some sites unofficially got a hat &#8212; <a href="http://winterba.sh/soup-du-jour">Seasoned Advice</a> and <a href="http://winterba.sh/git-r-done">Home Improvement</a> &#8212; but I&#8217;d love to see more sites get their own bespoke hats.</li>
<li>More hats! Secret hats seemed to get people the most excited &#8212; adding more of those to the batch next year strikes me as a very good idea.</li>
</ul>
<p>If you have suggestions or feedback about Winter Bash, <a href="http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/161188/what-do-you-think-of-winter-bash"><b>please feel free to answer this post</b></a>. I&#8217;m going to keep an eye on it, and gather ideas and improvements for next year from your responses.</p>
<p>When we first tried out this idea on Arqade, it wasn&#8217;t entirely clear this would be well-received elsewhere. But, based on what I&#8217;ve seen these past few weeks, I don&#8217;t think we&#8217;ve seen the last of Hats on Stack Exchange.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<slash:comments>15</slash:comments>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Podcast #39 &#8211; The One with Wil Wheaton</title>
		<link>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2012/12/podcast-39-the-one-with-wil-wheaton/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2012/12/podcast-39-the-one-with-wil-wheaton/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 24 Dec 2012 15:34:05 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alex Miller</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[podcasts]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.stackoverflow.com/?p=12862</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Today&#8217;s guest is Jeremy Tunnell, who says it&#8217;s great to be here. He&#8217;s the new Product Manager on the Stack Exchange team. He works out of Nashville but is in New York with us, recording live in the podcast studio! Also, on today&#8217;s podcast, everyone is going to eat a spoon of cinnamon and ten Saltines. Sam tried to eat a [...]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Today&#8217;s guest is <a href="http://stackexchange.com/users/1635441/jeremy-tunnell" target="_blank">Jeremy Tunnell</a>, who says it&#8217;s great to be here. He&#8217;s the new Product Manager on the Stack Exchange team. He works out of Nashville but is in New York with us, recording live in the podcast studio!</p>
<ul>
<li>Also, on today&#8217;s podcast, everyone is going to eat a spoon of cinnamon and ten Saltines. <a href="http://stackexchange.com/users/482412/samthebrand" target="_blank">Sam</a> tried to eat a spoonful of cinnamon and did not succeed. The Saltine Challenge: also hard. The Gallon Challenge: also hard.</li>
<li>Jeremy is the new kid on the block. He started a few weeks ago and is our new resident UX Expert.</li>
<li>We should have listeners call into the podcast with their questions, like we used to! (This was before Jay&#8217;s time.)  Go to <a href="http://s.tk/podcastquestions" target="_blank">s.tk/podcastquestions</a> to submit an mp3 of your question for next week&#8217;s podcast.</li>
<li>Jeremy is <strong>not</strong> from Texas, but he is from the South. We&#8217;re not sure how he got the horse up past security in the lobby.</li>
<li>Back to Jeremy. He&#8217;s been focusing on the perspective of the new user (including making lots of brand new accounts). He&#8217;s trying to introduce the non-engineer perspective into our development process. He&#8217;s currently focusing on the sign-up process, which is critical for user acquisition.</li>
<li>Why do we have a homepage URL? In the old days, your name used to link to whatever homepage you put in there. Nobody uses it now, though, so we can get rid of it!</li>
<li>Jay points out that we have a fundamental difference between our power users and our casual users. Additionally, we have to wrestle with engineers vs. non-engineer types as users on our sites.</li>
<li>Don&#8217;t make people think, or learn new things. (Don&#8217;t make me think about how you want me to enter my phone number.)</li>
<li>Joel got in trouble with his bosses at Juno once upon a time. It had a 29-page wizard to get people to sign up, including a page for <em>what diseases you had</em>, and when your birthday and your kids&#8217; birthdays were, featuring a horrible date picker (18 clicks to choose &#8220;August&#8221;).</li>
<li>The answer to all these arguments? Just test it and see what people do. (Good thing we don&#8217;t have to <em>fly to Colorado</em> to do usability testing anymore.)</li>
<li>We have a weird maximum age on Stack Exchange sites, so there are a ton of 89-year-olds on our site, apparently.</li>
<li>We have heard from a lot of people that our site is impossible to log into. Our site is optimized for programmers. A great example: OpenID! We talk about OpenID and OAuth for… a while.</li>
<li>Another example of something that&#8217;s a good idea for programmers but confuses everyone else is Gravatar. Gravatar is great if you already have an account, but the experience of trying to upload a picture is too many steps if you have to make a new Gravatar account.</li>
<li>Do our listeners know how much Jeremy looks like Wil Wheaton?  Check out the<a href="http://stackexchange.com/about/team"> Stack Exchange Team</a> page to find out</li>
<li>News from the dev team! We had two outages this week, totally unrelated to each other. One was ten minutes and the other less than 30 minutes. (Nowhere near as bad as Tumblr&#8217;s catastrophe last night!) (Our status blog is on tumblr.) One was a boring hardware failure, and the other one is a result of the fact that we&#8217;re starting to outgrow our search solution.</li>
<li>So we&#8217;re investigating other options that will make our search even better (and it&#8217;s suddenly urgent)! So a side effect of these outages is that our search will get better. We talk about search for a while.</li>
<li>So if you&#8217;re interested in working on that, <a href="http://stackexchange.com/about/hiring" target="_blank">we&#8217;re hiring</a> for our New York office, or remotely!</li>
<li>If you have questions for us, you can go record your question and <a href="http://s.tk/podcastquestions" target="_blank">send it to us</a>!</li>
</ul>
<p>That&#8217;s all for this week. See you on ChaCha!<br />
<iframe src="https://w.soundcloud.com/player/?url=http%3A%2F%2Fapi.soundcloud.com%2Ftracks%2F72432544" frameborder="no" scrolling="no" width="100%" height="166"></iframe></p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2012/12/podcast-39-the-one-with-wil-wheaton/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>8</slash:comments>
			<enclosure url="http://www.podtrac.com/pts/redirect.mp3/feeds.soundcloud.com/stream/72432544-stack-exchange-stack-exchange-podcast-39.mp3" length="50754176" type="audio/mpeg" />
		<itunes:duration>0:52:52</itunes:duration>
		<itunes:subtitle>Today&#8217;s guest is Jeremy Tunnell, who says it&#8217;s great to be here. He&#8217;s the new Product Manager on the Stack Exchange team. He works out of Nashville but is in New York with us, recording live in the podcast studio!

Also, on today[...]</itunes:subtitle>
		<itunes:summary>Today&#8217;s guest is Jeremy Tunnell, who says it&#8217;s great to be here. He&#8217;s the new Product Manager on the Stack Exchange team. He works out of Nashville but is in New York with us, recording live in the podcast studio!

Also, on today&#8217;s podcast, everyone is going to eat a spoon of cinnamon and ten Saltines. Sam tried to eat a spoonful of cinnamon and did not succeed. The Saltine Challenge: also hard. The Gallon Challenge: also hard.
Jeremy is the new kid on the block. He started a few weeks ago and is our new resident UX Expert.
We should have listeners call into the podcast with their questions, like we used to! (This was before Jay&#8217;s time.)  Go to s.tk/podcastquestions to submit an mp3 of your question for next week&#8217;s podcast.
Jeremy is not from Texas, but he is from the South. We&#8217;re not sure how he got the horse up past security in the lobby.
Back to Jeremy. He&#8217;s been focusing on the perspective of the new user (including making lots of brand new accounts). He&#8217;s trying to introduce the non-engineer perspective into our development process. He&#8217;s currently focusing on the sign-up process, which is critical for user acquisition.
Why do we have a homepage URL? In the old days, your name used to link to whatever homepage you put in there. Nobody uses it now, though, so we can get rid of it!
Jay points out that we have a fundamental difference between our power users and our casual users. Additionally, we have to wrestle with engineers vs. non-engineer types as users on our sites.
Don&#8217;t make people think, or learn new things. (Don&#8217;t make me think about how you want me to enter my phone number.)
Joel got in trouble with his bosses at Juno once upon a time. It had a 29-page wizard to get people to sign up, including a page for what diseases you had, and when your birthday and your kids&#8217; birthdays were, featuring a horrible date picker (18 clicks to choose &#8220;August&#8221;).
The answer to all these arguments? Just test it and see what people do. (Good thing we don&#8217;t have to fly to Colorado to do usability testing anymore.)
We have a weird maximum age on Stack Exchange sites, so there are a ton of 89-year-olds on our site, apparently.
We have heard from a lot of people that our site is impossible to log into. Our site is optimized for programmers. A great example: OpenID! We talk about OpenID and OAuth for… a while.
Another example of something that&#8217;s a good idea for programmers but confuses everyone else is Gravatar. Gravatar is great if you already have an account, but the experience of trying to upload a picture is too many steps if you have to make a new Gravatar account.
Do our listeners know how much Jeremy looks like Wil Wheaton?  Check out the Stack Exchange Team page to find out
News from the dev team! We had two outages this week, totally unrelated to each other. One was ten minutes and the other less than 30 minutes. (Nowhere near as bad as Tumblr&#8217;s catastrophe last night!) (Our status blog is on tumblr.) One was a boring hardware failure, and the other one is a result of the fact that we&#8217;re starting to outgrow our search solution.
So we&#8217;re investigating other options that will make our search even better (and it&#8217;s suddenly urgent)! So a side effect of these outages is that our search will get better. We talk about search for a while.
So if you&#8217;re interested in working on that, we&#8217;re hiring for our New York office, or remotely!
If you have questions for us, you can go record your question and send it to us!

That&#8217;s all for this week. See you on ChaCha!
</itunes:summary>
		<itunes:keywords>podcasts</itunes:keywords>
		<itunes:author>The Stack Exchange Team</itunes:author>
		<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
		<itunes:block>no</itunes:block>
	</item>
		<item>
		<title>Stack Exchange Gives Back 2012</title>
		<link>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2012/12/stack-exchange-gives-back-2012/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2012/12/stack-exchange-gives-back-2012/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 21 Dec 2012 23:14:10 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Robert Cartaino</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[background]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.stackoverflow.com/?p=12853</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[2012 has come and gone, and we have accomplished many incredible things together. Our little corner of the Internet has changed the way people teach and share information with their peers. This has become a place to share the interests you are passionate about — a place to get better what you do, and you [...]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>2012 has come and gone, and we have accomplished many incredible things together. Our little corner of the Internet has changed the way people teach and share information with their peers. This has become a place to share the interests you are passionate about — a place to get better what you do, and you do it all with a bit of fun and humor and a chance to show off a bit on occasion.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><img class="wp-image-12854 aligncenter" title="new years 2013" src="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/wp-content/uploads/new-years-2013-300x228.png" alt="" width="300" height="228" /></p>
<p>But the biggest motivation that drives what we do is a sense of <em>purpose</em> — a sense that we are <em>all</em> doing something really important here. Stack Exchange isn&#8217;t created from the hard work of one individual. It takes the collective effort of much larger community working together.</p>
<p>That&#8217;s why we take this time of year to remember why we are here. This is the time we set aside to give back to the community.</p>
<p>It has been a tradition at Stack Exchange to <strong>make a $100 donation to charity on behalf of <em>each</em> community moderator</strong>. When the invitations are sent, watching the outpouring of charity selections come racing back in real time is breathtaking. Within hours, hundreds of moderators already selected their charity wishes. That kind of outpouring of support is something we can all feel good about.</p>
<p>So&#8230; on behalf of <a title="The 304 moderators of Stack Exchange" href="http://stackexchange.com/about/moderators?by=users"><strong>the 304 moderators of Stack Exchange</strong></a>, we will be making the the following donations to charity this holiday season:</p>
<ul>
<li><a title="The Humane Society" href="http://www.humanesociety.org/">The Humane Society</a> — $2,700</li>
<li><a title="The Red Cross (Sandy Relief)" href="http://www.redcross.org/hurricane-sandy">The Red Cross (Sandy Relief)</a> — $3,600</li>
<li><a title="Wikimedia Foundation" href="http://wikimediafoundation.org">Wikimedia Foundation</a> — $6,800</li>
<li><a title="Electronic Frontier Foundation" href="https://www.eff.org/">Electronic Frontier Foundation</a> — $6,900</li>
<li><a title="Doctors Without Borders" href="http://www.doctorswithoutborders.org/">Doctors Without Borders</a> — $10,400</li>
</ul>
<p>And to these projects that we use extensively and helped us build our own network of websites:</p>
<ul>
<li><a title="HAProxy" href="http://haproxy.1wt.eu/">HAProxy</a> — $1,000</li>
<li><a title="OpenSTV" href="http://www.openstv.org/">OpenSTV</a> — $1,000</li>
<li><a title="DotNetOpenAuth" href="http://www.dotnetopenauth.net/">DotNetOpenAuth</a> — $1,000</li>
</ul>
<p>So here&#8217;s to 2012. Here&#8217;s to the moderators who volunteer their time, their passion, and their leadership to keep these sites humming. Here&#8217;s to the incredibly talented team at Stack Exchange who keeps the gears running and the lights on. And here&#8217;s to <em>you</em> — the communities who have worked so hard to become part of this shared vision. You are truly the best in the world at what you do.</p>
<p>Farewell, 2012. Welcome, 2013!</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<slash:comments>27</slash:comments>
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		<title>Apptivate.MS: the results are in!</title>
		<link>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2012/12/apptivate-ms-the-results-are-in/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2012/12/apptivate-ms-the-results-are-in/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 20 Dec 2012 14:51:44 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Abby T. Miller</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[announcement]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[promotion]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[stackoverflow]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.stackoverflow.com/?p=12827</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[After almost three months, Apptivate &#8211; the application development contest collaboration between Stack Overflow and Microsoft &#8211; has come to an end. Let&#8217;s get to the big news right off the bat. Congratulations to our two Apptivate.MS Grand Prize Winners: Piano Time and Layout! Congratulations to Piano Time and Layout! Layout is a powerful tool [...]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>After almost three months, Apptivate &#8211; <a href="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2012/09/apptivate-ms-a-windows-8-app-development-contest/">the application development contest collaboration between Stack Overflow and Microsoft</a> &#8211; has come to an end.</p>
<p>Let&#8217;s get to the big news right off the bat. Congratulations to our two Apptivate.MS Grand Prize Winners: <a href="http://apptivate.ms/apps/130/piano-time">Piano Time</a> and <a href="http://apptivate.ms/apps/111/layout">Layout</a>!</p>
<p><img src="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/wp-content/uploads/blog-winners.png" alt="" title="blog-winners" width="650" height="366" class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-12839" />
<p align="center" style="font-size:12px;">Congratulations to Piano Time and Layout!</p>
<p><a href="http://apptivate.ms/apps/111/layout">Layout</a> is a powerful tool for interaction design that makes prototyping in the early stages of development and design a breeze. <a href="http://apptivate.ms/apps/130/piano-time">Piano Time</a> is a multitouch piano keyboard for your Surface or other Windows 8 tablet device. (It also supports using your keyboard as, well, a keyboard.) It includes recording and playback, a metronome, a learning mode, and more.</p>
<p>As grand prize winners, these two apps win a <strong>$5,000 cash prize</strong>! They will also be featured in <a href="http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/aa570311.aspx">MSDN Flash</a> and on the <a href="https://channel9.msdn.com/Blogs/DevRadio">DevRadio</a> show, and they will be promoted by Microsoft throughout the developer community.</p>
<p>The grand prize winners came from a pool of 15 finalists and were chosen by a panel made up of Stack Overflow&#8217;s own <strong>Joel Spolsky</strong> and <strong>David Fullerton</strong>, as well as Microsoft developer evangelists <strong>Doris Chen</strong> and <strong>Jeff Brand</strong>. There was some stiff competition for the judges to choose from, and we congratulate <a href="http://apptivate.ms/semi-finals">all of our finalists</a>. They won&#8217;t be going home empty-handed, either &#8211; along with the winners of the Reviewer Sweepstakes, they&#8217;ll go home with some great prizes, too. The first place winners from each category group win a Surface plus a $500 cash prize. The second and third place winners go home with good stuff, too. Johnny, tell &#8216;em what they&#8217;ve won!</p>
<p><img src="http://cdn.prom.sstatic.net/apptivate/img/developer-prizes.png?v=2" alt="" /></p>
<p align="center" style="font-size:12px;">And <em>you</em> get a Surface! And <em>you</em> get a Surface! EVERYONE gets a Surface!</p>
<p>The 15 finalists came from a pool of 50 semi-finalists, which in turn came from the list of over 300 fully eligible submissions to Apptivate. Some more stats about the event:</p>
<ul>
<li>There were 456 apps submitted overall, including deleted and ineligible apps</li>
<li>The third week of November was the best week for app submission, with 49 apps coming in that week</li>
<li>Apptivate users posted 2646 questions and answers in the [windows-8] and [microsoft-metro] Stack Overflow tags</li>
<li>Over the course of the event, 3163 users voted (on apps or on comment threads) 7454 times</li>
</ul>
<p>That&#8217;s all for Apptivate… in 2012! The response to this was so positive, we&#8217;re already on the lookout for similar collaborations in the new year&#8230; So stay tuned!</p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2012/12/apptivate-ms-the-results-are-in/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>16</slash:comments>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Welcome to Winter Bash 2012!</title>
		<link>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2012/12/welcome-to-winter-bash-2012/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2012/12/welcome-to-winter-bash-2012/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 19 Dec 2012 00:42:22 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Aarthi Devanathan</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[announcement]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[stackexchange]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.stackoverflow.com/?p=12750</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[It’s been an amazing year for Stack Exchange, both as a network of experts and enthusiasts and as an organization. We launched twenty new sites, rolled out tons of user-requested features, and are helping 99% more visitors get answers than we were a year ago. Last year, we celebrated the holidays on Gaming with Hat [...]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>It’s been an amazing year for Stack Exchange, both as a network of experts and enthusiasts and as an organization. We launched twenty new sites, rolled out tons of user-requested features, and are helping 99% more visitors get answers than we were a year ago. </p>
<p>Last year, we celebrated the holidays on Gaming with <a href="http://blog.gaming.stackexchange.com/2011/12/holiday-2011-hat-dash-the-hattening/">Hat Dash,</a> where users collected virtual hats by doing various (good, helpful) things on the site. They were sort of like festive, temporary badges (and, <a href="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2008/07/stack-overflow-badge-feedbac/">like badges</a>, borrowed another good idea from the XBox &#8211; earning the ability to customize your avatar).</p>
<p>The response from that event was so positive, we decided to extend that to the <i>entire network</i><sup>1</sup> this holiday season. </p>
<h2><a href="http://winterba.sh/">Welcome to <i>Winter Bash 2012</i>!</a></h2>
<p><a href="http://winterba.sh/"><img src="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/wp-content/uploads/blog-image-1.png" title="Catch a snowflake on your tongue!" /></a></p>
<h3>What is Winter Bash?</h3>
<p>From <b>19 December to 4 January</b> you’ll be able to decorate your gravatar with a special hat. The hats used on Arqade smelled a bit funny, so we made up an all-new set of hats for you to earn this year. In fact, many of these “hats” aren’t even hats!  There are sunglasses, moustaches, masks and other assorted headgear.</p>
<p>Each hat has different criteria to unlock it, and there are even some <i>secret hats</i> that you won’t find out about until you happen to stumble across them accidentally.</p>
<p><img src="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/wp-content/uploads/watson.png" /><br />
<img src="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/wp-content/uploads/leaderboard.png" /></p>
<p>Hats show up all over the site, wherever your gravatar is shown (well, except for a few places where they didn’t fit, like chat). To change which hat you’re wearing, or to admire your lovely hat collection, just visit <a href="http://winterba.sh">http://winterba.sh</a> or check out your user page:</p>
<p><img src="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/wp-content/uploads/hats202.png" /></p>
<p>You&#8217;ll also get a notification when you earn a new item:</p>
<p><img src="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/wp-content/uploads/notice2.png" /></p>
<p>For all those of you who <a href="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/wp-content/uploads/grumpyhat.jpg">really hate hats</a>, there’s an &#8220;I hate hats&#8221; link in the Winter Bash dropdown. But give it a shot before you turn it off &#8212; you might find a hat you like!</p>
<p><img src="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/wp-content/uploads/popup4.png" /></p>
<p>Check out the <a href="//winterba.sh/faq">Winter Bash FAQ</a> for more details.</p>
<h3>Why are we doing this?</h3>
<p>Because it’s fun, and <a href="//blog.stackoverflow.com/2010/01/stack-overflow-where-we-hate-fun/">we love fun</a> &#8211; at least, constructive fun, in moderation, at the end of a long, exciting and eventful year. Also, hats are awesome.<sup>2</sup></p>
<hr />
<p><span style="font-size:10px"><sup>1</sup>Well. Only those sites that opted to participate. <a href="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/wp-content/uploads/joinin.png">You must opt-in on Stack Overflow</a>.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size:10px"><sup>2</sup> Please note: virtual hats do not protect against the harmful rays of the sun &#8211; always wear sunscreen!</span></p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2012/12/welcome-to-winter-bash-2012/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>21</slash:comments>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Hey there, stranger!</title>
		<link>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2012/12/hey-there-stranger/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2012/12/hey-there-stranger/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 14 Dec 2012 23:28:14 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Aarthi Devanathan</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[background]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[stackoverflow]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.stackoverflow.com/?p=12735</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[It&#8217;s that most wonderful time of the year again &#8212; time for the Stack Overflow Annual Survey! So, put down that third glass of eggnog and fire up a new tab. It only takes a few minutes &#8211; and there are stickers! As the name suggests, we&#8217;ve been doing this for a few years now [...]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p class='alignright' style='margin-left:1.5em'><a href="https://www.surveymonkey.com/s/T59Q82L"><img src="http://static.adzerk.net/Advertisers/1efaea9356764cb6a86564960eba62bb.png" /></a></p>
<p>It&#8217;s that most wonderful time of the year again &#8212; time for <a href="https://www.surveymonkey.com/s/T59Q82L">the Stack Overflow Annual Survey</a>! So, put down that third glass of eggnog and fire up a new tab. It only takes a few minutes &#8211; and there are stickers!</p>
<p>As the name suggests, we&#8217;ve been doing this for a few years now (here are the <a href="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2011/01/survey-says/">2010 results</a> and the <a href="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2012/02/survey-results/">2011 results</a> for your perusal) and we always learn a lot from them. This data is used to support the advertising we sell on <a href="http://stackoverflow.com">Stack Overflow</a> and <a href="http://serverfault.com">Server Fault</a>. Advertising helps keep the lights on (and servers humming) around here, so if you use either (or both!) sites, we urge you to participate. </p>
<p>For those of you who&#8217;ve been around this block with us before, the survey should look fairly familiar. There&#8217;s no longer <a href="http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/158456/stack-overflow-annual-user-survey/158471#158471">two jQuery options</a>, though you can still jQuery while you jQuery if you need to. There are some questions that are a bit different, so please read each item carefully before you respond.</p>
<p>Just like previous years, we&#8217;re putting ads like the one above around the site to solicit particpation, and this blog post will help us reach our goal of roughly 3,500 responses. We&#8217;ll share the results of the survey with you all in a blog post early next year, and you&#8217;ll have the option of signing up to receive a copy of the results emailed to you directly at the end of the survey. So, please <a href="https://www.surveymonkey.com/s/T59Q82L">take a few moments to fill out the survey</a> and then you can get right back to <a href="http://25.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_m04t4pkRg91rq9ex7o1_250.gif">your holiday festivities</a>.</p>
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		<title>Stack Overflow localizes Careers 2.0 in German</title>
		<link>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2012/12/stack-overflow-localizes-careers-2-0-in-german/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2012/12/stack-overflow-localizes-careers-2-0-in-german/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 12 Dec 2012 17:00:33 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Bethany Marzewski</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[announcement]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[careers]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.stackoverflow.com/?p=12695</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[After months of work from our dev team, last week marked the official launch of our first localized site with Careers 2.0 in German. We celebrated the occasion in style on December 5 with a blow-out party at Betahaus in Berlin complete with product demos, free food, free t-shirts, oh, and German beer of course. [...]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>After months of work from our dev team, last week marked the official launch of our first <em>localized</em> site with <a href="http://careers.stackoverflow.com/de">Careers 2.0 in German</a>. We celebrated the occasion in style on December 5 with a blow-out party at Betahaus in Berlin complete with product demos, free food, free t-shirts, oh, and German beer of course. </p>
<div style="text-align:center"><img src="http://i.stack.imgur.com/f567I.png" title='"Stack Overflow localizes Careers 2.0 in German -- Here&apos;s a photo of our only German developer with a beer bottle in his face!" balpha commented wryly upon seeing this post'><br />
(<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/stackexchange/sets/72157632215888055/with/8264586890/">More pictures here</a>.)
</div>
<p>But why <em>Germany</em>? Well, aside from the fact that it gave us a great excuse to make <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/stackexchange/8264586890/in/set-72157632215888055">these really cool t-shirts</a>, we have a few other pretty good reasons for this expansion:</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<ul>
<li><strong>Germans are the largest non-English-speaking group of Stack Overflow users in Europe</strong><br />
To date, visitors from Germany represent the fourth largest global audience who visit Stack Overflow on a monthly basis—making this the largest non-English speaking European userbase. And even though many of these users do speak English (at least for programming), employers or hiring managers who don’t speak English can’t use the Careers 2.0 global site as easily as fluent English speakers. With this localization, we hope to bring Careers 2.0 to everyone on both sides of the hiring equation.</li>
<li><strong>Better exposure for our German candidates</strong>
<p>We have more than 3,600 German candidate profiles in our Careers 2.0 database, and in a job market where German tech hiring needs have <a href="http://www.bitkom.org/de/markt_statistik/64054_73892.aspx">more than doubled in the past three years</a>, programmer jobs are in hot demand. (In fact, a couple of guys even showed up to our launch party wearing <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/stackexchange/8262041261/in/set-72157632215888055">QR code t-shirts</a> in their search for a developer.) Making a German site will hopefully give these candidates even more exposure to all great local companies—not just those who have a hiring manager who speaks English.</li>
<li><strong>Germany’s tech market has been growing exponentially</strong>
<p>It’s been estimated that <a href="http://www.bitkom.org/de/presse/8477_72274.aspx">11 billion Euros are lost</a> in possible output because German companies can’t hire enough engineers. And as the world’s largest resource for programmers (Google analytics counted more than 30 million unique visitors last month!), we hope to help solve that problem by connecting companies with the software developers they need.</li>
<li><strong>It was a good excuse for us to start accepting Euros</strong>
<p>If you log onto <a href="http://careers.stackoverflow.com/de">careers.stackoverflow.com/de</a>, you’ll be prompted to pay for your job listings in Euros. If you&#8217;ve ever tried to buy something on a site in a foreign currency, you know what a pain it can be to deal with the exchange rates and credit card fees. Now we’re just more accessible for a lot more people. (We’re also now accepting the British Pound on <a href="http://careers.stackoverflow.com/uk/">the UK site</a>.)</li>
</ul>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>All in all, it&#8217;s been a great project for our team (though also a difficult one, as you&#8217;ll hear about in a future blog post) and localizing the site was an important way for us to support the German-speaking community on Stack Overflow.  As always, we’re open to hearing your feedback, so let us know what you think.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><a href="http://careers.stackoverflow.com/de"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-12708" src="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/wp-content/uploads/careers_de-1.png" alt="" width="1079" height="1262" /></a></p>
<p>P.S. We know we missed some things, so if you speak German, feel free to check out the site and <a href="http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/156432/feedback-wanted-careers-in-german">let us know what we still need to fix</a>.</p>
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		<title>Announcing the Apptivate.MS competition semi-finals</title>
		<link>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2012/12/windows-devs-on-stack-overflow-when-did-this-happen/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2012/12/windows-devs-on-stack-overflow-when-did-this-happen/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 10 Dec 2012 14:00:57 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Abby T. Miller</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[announcement]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[promotion]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[stackoverflow]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.stackoverflow.com/?p=12570</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[When we announced the Apptivate.MS competition two months ago, we were hoping that a few members of this community would create and submit a few solid Windows 8 apps &#8211; forty or fifty, maybe. A hundred if it really went well. So when we saw all of the high-quality and innovative app submissions that poured [...]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>When we <a href="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2012/09/apptivate-ms-a-windows-8-app-development-contest/">announced the Apptivate.MS competition</a> two months ago, we were hoping that a few members of this community would create and submit a few solid Windows 8 apps &#8211; forty or fifty, maybe. A hundred if it <em>really</em> went well.</p>
<p>So when we saw all of the high-quality and innovative app submissions that poured in, we were quite frankly blown away. The Stack Overflow community submitted <strong>almost 400 apps</strong>. <a href="http://apptivate.ms/apps">See for yourself</a>!</p>
<div class="wp-caption"><img style="margin-left:auto;margin-right:auto;" src="http://i.stack.imgur.com/zw2JG.png" alt="" width="460px;" height="276px;" title="Apps are the REAL real thing" />
<p class="wp-caption-text">Yet again, the Stack Overflow community has <em>crushed it</em>.</p>
</div>
<p>The quality and size of the submission pool made our next job really, really difficult: narrowing them down to just 50 apps for the semi-finals, ten for each of the following category groups: <a href="http://apptivate.ms/apps/groups/1/knowledge">Knowledge</a>, <a href="http://apptivate.ms/apps/groups/2/games">Games</a>, <a href="http://apptivate.ms/apps/groups/3/interest">Interest</a>, <a href="http://apptivate.ms/apps/groups/4/work">Work</a>, and <a href="http://apptivate.ms/apps/groups/5/social">Social</a>. A panel of Stack Exchange judges (appointed by Microsoft) ranked all the submissions based on the following rubric:</p>
<ul>
<li dir="ltr">Innovativeness/Creativity (30%)</li>
<li dir="ltr">Quality of Submission (30%)</li>
<li dir="ltr">Use of Windows 8 features, such as the live tile display (30%)</li>
<li dir="ltr">Public Appeal (voting) (10%)</li>
</ul>
<div>
<p>With these criteria in mind, we put together <a href="http://apptivate.ms/semi-finals">a killer semi-finalist slate</a>. You can vote for your three favorite apps in each category group between now and December 16th (23:59 UTC).</p>
<p>The three highest-voted apps in each category group <a href="http://apptivate.ms/contest#developer-contest">will win prizes</a> no matter what. They&#8217;ll also be eligible for a $5000 cash grand prize, so cast your votes to ensure that the best app wins the day. Not an altruist? Voting in the semi-finals also makes you eligible for the <a href="http://apptivate.ms/contest#reviewer-contest">reviewer contest</a>.</p>
</div>
<div class="wp-caption"><img style="margin-left:auto;margin-right:auto;" src="http://i.stack.imgur.com/9LkDd.png" alt="" width="720px;" height="168px;" /></p>
<p class="wp-caption-text">The three top-voted semi-finalists in each category group will win great prizes!</p>
</div>
<p>You can also continue to leave comments on any app, which also gets you entry into the reviewer contest &#8211; as well as providing valuable feedback to Windows 8 developers.</p>
<p>The semi-finals voting phase ends December 16th, 2012, so get your votes in now!</p>
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		<title>Meet the new additions to the Stack Exchange clan</title>
		<link>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2012/12/meet-the-new-additions-to-the-stack-exchange-clan/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2012/12/meet-the-new-additions-to-the-stack-exchange-clan/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 07 Dec 2012 22:03:31 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Joe Humphries</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[background]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.stackoverflow.com/?p=12613</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The fun continues &#8212; in the past month and a half we&#8217;ve welcomed seven new hires!  We&#8217;re growing at a steady pace and we don&#8217;t plan to stop.  Get to know our newest coworkers: &#160; Maura Bradley, Sales Representative New York Originally from the City of Brotherly Love, Maura graduated from the University of Notre [...]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The fun continues &#8212; in the past month and a half we&#8217;ve welcomed seven new hires!  We&#8217;re growing at a steady pace and we don&#8217;t plan to stop.  Get to know our newest coworkers:</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><strong> <img class="alignleft  wp-image-12617" style="border: 1px solid black;margin-right: 2em" src="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/wp-content/uploads/Bradley-Maura3-e1354826980270.jpg" alt="" width="180" height="180" />Maura Bradley, Sales Representative</strong></p>
<p><em>New York</em></p>
<p><em></em>Originally from the City of Brotherly Love, Maura graduated from the University of Notre Dame and recently moved to the Big Apple to join the Careers 2.0 sales team.  On summer weekends, you can find her at the (South) Jersey Shore, relaxing on the beach or at a local watering hole. She enjoys running outside, dive bars, puzzles, Broadway plays, activities, and cooking a mean chicken parm.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><strong><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-12618" style="border: 1px solid black;margin-right: 2em" src="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/wp-content/uploads/Eisen-Natalie2-e1354827175469.jpg" alt="" width="180" height="180" />Natalie Eisen, Sales Representative</strong></p>
<p><em>New York</em></p>
<p>A recent graduate of Barnard College, where she majored in Urban Studies and Sociology, Natalie is super pumped to join the Stack Exchange team. Although an Ohio native, Natalie always knew she would live in New York, the land of many cupcakes; she suggests the &#8220;Ooey Gooey&#8221; at Sugar Sweet Sunshine.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><strong><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-12619" style="border: 1px solid black;margin-right: 2em" src="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/wp-content/uploads/Humphries-Joe2-e1354827364802.jpg" alt="" width="180" height="180" />Joe Humphries, Recruiter</strong></p>
<p><em>New York</em></p>
<p>Joe is a native of Cleveland, OH who relocated to Brooklyn just over two years ago. He began recruiting for tech startups in 2011, and is thrilled to be working at Stack Exchange. For fun, you’ll find him playing word games on his iPhone (because he’s really cool), eating/drinking at as many different restaurants as possible, and having a general love affair with NYC.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><strong><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-12620" style="border: 1px solid black;margin-right: 2em" src="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/wp-content/uploads/Murawski-Steve1-e1354827547550.jpg" alt="" width="180" height="180" /><a href="http://stackoverflow.com/users/1233/steven-murawski">Steven Murawski</a>, System Administrator</strong></p>
<p><em>Milwaukee<strong></strong></em></p>
<p>Steven joins the crack sysadmin team at Stack Exchange, bringing his humble skill set and the willingness to learn he developed over the past few years.  Steven is an avid community member: he runs two local user groups, and presents and teaches at community conferences across the country. He was recognized by Microsoft for his contributions to the PowerShell community with a Microsoft MVP award in 2012.  For fun, he loves to read, spend time with his wife and son, and read to his son.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><strong><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-12621" style="border: 1px solid black;margin-right: 2em" src="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/wp-content/uploads/Schnelle-Peter1-e1354827743767.jpg" alt="" width="180" height="180" /></strong><strong>Peter Schnelle, Sales Representative</strong></p>
<p><em>Denver</em></p>
<p>Hailing from the great Northern state of Michigan, Peter is a Michigan State grad who bleeds green and white. Growing up with a farm, he is an avid hunter and fisher who loves just about anything to do with the outdoors. This winter he is trying to pick up snowboarding, so watch out Shaun White!</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><strong><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-12622" style="border: 1px solid black;margin-right: 2em" src="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/wp-content/uploads/Tunnell-Jeremy1-e1354827948513.jpg" alt="" width="180" height="180" /><a href="http://ux.stackexchange.com/users/20755/jeremy-tunnell">Jeremy Tunnell</a>, Product Manager</strong></p>
<p><em>Nashville</em></p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px">Jeremy is originally from Tennessee. After getting his engineering degree, he promptly set out for Washington DC to make copies and brew coffee on The Hill. Having had enough, he moved to San Francisco where he cofounded a startup and managed to make less money than a Hill staffer. For stress relief, he used to play saxophone and violin, but stumbled into swing and salsa dancing, which won out. He dreams of owning a bar and music venue.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><strong><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-12638" style="border: 1px solid black;margin-right: 2em" src="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/wp-content/uploads/Martin-Chris5-e1354829567911.jpg" alt="" width="180" height="180" />Chris Martin, Sales Representative</strong></p>
<p><em>London</em></p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px">Before we start, no he&#8217;s not Chris Martin of Coldplay fame, he&#8217;s the totally non-famous Chris Martin that now works for the great company that is Stack Exchange! Chris is truly excited to start work at Stack Exchange; it’s an amazingly cool company with really exciting times ahead.  He spends most of his free time obsessing with food, whether it’s cooking it or eating it. He believes London has one of the best restaurant scenes in the world, and he intends to try every dish from every restaurant!</p>
<hr />
<p><em>Visit our <span style="text-decoration: underline"><a href="http://www.stackexchange.com/about/hiring">careers page</a></span> to learn all the reasons Stack Exchange is a ridiculously awesome place to work. </em><em>Want to see your face in our next new hire announcement? Here&#8217;s who we need:</em></p>
<p><a href="http://careers.stackoverflow.com/jobs/16279/stack-overflow-careers-developer-new-york-stack-exchange">Web Developer &#8211; Careers Team (NYC)</a></p>
<p><a href="http://careers.stackoverflow.com/jobs/23229/stack-exchange-developer-telecommute-stack-exchange">Web Developer &#8211; Q&amp;A Team (NYC or telecommute)</a></p>
<p><a href="http://careers.stackoverflow.com/jobs/24481/product-designer-stack-exchange">Product Designer (NYC or telecommute)</a></p>
<p><a href="http://stackexchange.com/about/hiring/account-executive-careers-2.0">Account Executive &#8211; Careers 2.0 (London; Denver; NYC)</a></p>
<p><a href="http://stackexchange.com/about/hiring/sales-representative-inside-sales-careers-2.0">Inside Sales Representative &#8211; Careers 2.0 (London; Denver; NYC)</a></p>
<p><a href="http://stackexchange.com/about/hiring/office-admin-london">Office Admin (London)</a></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
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		<title>SE Podcast #38 &#8211; This One&#8217;s At Least a 4/10</title>
		<link>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2012/12/se-podcast-38-this-ones-at-least-a-410/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2012/12/se-podcast-38-this-ones-at-least-a-410/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 03 Dec 2012 15:29:37 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alex Miller</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[podcasts]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.stackoverflow.com/?p=12554</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Welcome to Stack Exchange podcast #38 with Joel, Jay, David, and new special guest Will Cole, PM on the Careers team.  We&#8217;re doing a deep dive into Careers today, as we have the launch of Careers in German coming up! Stack Overflow Careers 2.0 is launching in Germany! (Much has happened since the last time [...]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Welcome to Stack Exchange podcast #38 with Joel, Jay, David, and new special guest Will Cole, PM on the Careers team.  We&#8217;re doing a deep dive into <a href="http://careers.stackoverflow.com">Careers</a> today, as we have the launch of <a href="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2012/11/join-stack-overflow-in-berlin-for-a-blowout-bash-on-december-5/">Careers in German</a> coming up!</p>
<ul>
<li>Stack Overflow Careers 2.0 is launching in Germany! (Much has happened since the last time we talked about Careers 2.0 on the podcast.)</li>
<li>So Will, tell us about Careers 2.0! Will gives us an overview about what it is and why it&#8217;s awesome. It has two products: job listings and CV search. They are both neato.</li>
<li>David and Joel discuss the background of why something like Careers 2.0 is necessary: resumes are awful for demonstrating what programmers know and can do.</li>
<li>We have over 75,000 profiles in the CV search database, which is awesome. If you&#8217;re looking to hire a programmer, we have 84,000 that you can have.</li>
<li>The average old-school big company hiring department has separated the task of finding resumes from the task of hiring candidates, so they are a little confused when they&#8217;re told to just check out Stack Overflow Careers 2.0.</li>
<li>We are trying to take the work and the confusion out of the job of the hiring manager &#8211; kind of like a dating service, trying to make employers happy with their candidates and candidates happy with their new companies.</li>
<li>We&#8217;re disrupting the contingency recruiting model, because contingency recruiters&#8217; interests are not aligned with employers OR candidates.</li>
<li>How come this localization took so long, Will? Because it turns out you can&#8217;t just go in and replace a bunch of English strings with their German equivalents!</li>
<li>Also, the site was not originally built with localization in mind, so the project was a little bit painful. Will and David walk us through the challenges the Careers team faced</li>
<li>Next currencies: bitcoins, and Google Wallet. Joel bought a sweater with Google Wallet, and it&#8217;s magical.</li>
<li><a href="http://careers.stackoverflow.com/jobs/16279/stack-overflow-careers-developer-new-york-stack-exchange" target="_blank">Careers is hiring</a>! Come join us in our new spectacular NYC office that we&#8217;ll move into in early 2013. It feels like a boat except it&#8217;s on the 27th and 28th floors. So a flying boat.</li>
<li>We have no other topics to discuss, so we&#8217;re going to continue talking about what&#8217;s great about working for Stack Exchange. Free food! Cuban health care! Free MetroCards! Gym membership reimbursement! A beach party! We don&#8217;t poke people with a sharp stick, and there&#8217;s nothing else oppressive, either!</li>
<li>People wear hats, especially winter-themed hats. Shouldn&#8217;t we celebrate all those hats? Definitely! Last year, we ran a project called Hatdash on <a href="http://arqade.com/" target="_blank">our site about video games</a>.. It was a huge hit, so we&#8217;re revamping the program this year for all sites that opt in. It will go live on December 19th. Hats!</li>
<li>Joel teaches us about the nightly news in Israel. It would just run until they ran out of things to talk about, which meant you never knew when anything was going to be on after that.</li>
<li>Next week on the Stack Exchange Podcast: Is this thing from the drug store killing you? We&#8217;ll tell you next week!</li>
</ul>
<p><iframe src="http://w.soundcloud.com/player/?url=http%3A%2F%2Fapi.soundcloud.com%2Ftracks%2F69812124&amp;show_artwork=true" frameborder="no" scrolling="no" width="100%" height="166"></iframe></p>
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		<slash:comments>6</slash:comments>
			<enclosure url="http://www.podtrac.com/pts/redirect.mp3/feeds.soundcloud.com/stream/69812124-stack-exchange-stack-exchange-podcast-38.mp3" length="37556480" type="audio/mpeg" />
		<itunes:duration>0:39:07</itunes:duration>
		<itunes:subtitle>Welcome to Stack Exchange podcast #38 with Joel, Jay, David, and new special guest Will Cole, PM on the Careers team.  We&#8217;re doing a deep dive into Careers today, as we have the launch of Careers in German coming up!

Stack Overflow Careers 2.[...]</itunes:subtitle>
		<itunes:summary>Welcome to Stack Exchange podcast #38 with Joel, Jay, David, and new special guest Will Cole, PM on the Careers team.  We&#8217;re doing a deep dive into Careers today, as we have the launch of Careers in German coming up!

Stack Overflow Careers 2.0 is launching in Germany! (Much has happened since the last time we talked about Careers 2.0 on the podcast.)
So Will, tell us about Careers 2.0! Will gives us an overview about what it is and why it&#8217;s awesome. It has two products: job listings and CV search. They are both neato.
David and Joel discuss the background of why something like Careers 2.0 is necessary: resumes are awful for demonstrating what programmers know and can do.
We have over 75,000 profiles in the CV search database, which is awesome. If you&#8217;re looking to hire a programmer, we have 84,000 that you can have.
The average old-school big company hiring department has separated the task of finding resumes from the task of hiring candidates, so they are a little confused when they&#8217;re told to just check out Stack Overflow Careers 2.0.
We are trying to take the work and the confusion out of the job of the hiring manager &#8211; kind of like a dating service, trying to make employers happy with their candidates and candidates happy with their new companies.
We&#8217;re disrupting the contingency recruiting model, because contingency recruiters&#8217; interests are not aligned with employers OR candidates.
How come this localization took so long, Will? Because it turns out you can&#8217;t just go in and replace a bunch of English strings with their German equivalents!
Also, the site was not originally built with localization in mind, so the project was a little bit painful. Will and David walk us through the challenges the Careers team faced
Next currencies: bitcoins, and Google Wallet. Joel bought a sweater with Google Wallet, and it&#8217;s magical.
Careers is hiring! Come join us in our new spectacular NYC office that we&#8217;ll move into in early 2013. It feels like a boat except it&#8217;s on the 27th and 28th floors. So a flying boat.
We have no other topics to discuss, so we&#8217;re going to continue talking about what&#8217;s great about working for Stack Exchange. Free food! Cuban health care! Free MetroCards! Gym membership reimbursement! A beach party! We don&#8217;t poke people with a sharp stick, and there&#8217;s nothing else oppressive, either!
People wear hats, especially winter-themed hats. Shouldn&#8217;t we celebrate all those hats? Definitely! Last year, we ran a project called Hatdash on our site about video games.. It was a huge hit, so we&#8217;re revamping the program this year for all sites that opt in. It will go live on December 19th. Hats!
Joel teaches us about the nightly news in Israel. It would just run until they ran out of things to talk about, which meant you never knew when anything was going to be on after that.
Next week on the Stack Exchange Podcast: Is this thing from the drug store killing you? We&#8217;ll tell you next week!

</itunes:summary>
		<itunes:keywords>podcasts</itunes:keywords>
		<itunes:author>The Stack Exchange Team</itunes:author>
		<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
		<itunes:block>no</itunes:block>
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		<title>Join Stack Overflow in Berlin for a blowout bash on December 5!</title>
		<link>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2012/11/join-stack-overflow-in-berlin-for-a-blowout-bash-on-december-5/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2012/11/join-stack-overflow-in-berlin-for-a-blowout-bash-on-december-5/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 26 Nov 2012 16:33:07 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Bethany Marzewski</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[meetups]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.stackoverflow.com/?p=12521</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Berlin, wir kommen! It’s our last party of the year, and this time, we’re heading to Germany to meet and mingle with the Stack Overflow community! As you may have noticed, we’ve been tearing up Denver this year with our opening reception of our new office and then again during Denver Startup Week last month. So [...]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Berlin, wir kommen!</p>
<p>It’s our last party of the year, and this time, we’re heading to Germany to meet and mingle with the Stack Overflow community! As you may have noticed, we’ve been tearing up Denver this year with our <a href="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2012/09/join-us-for-our-opening-reception-of-stack-exchange-denver/">opening reception of our new office</a> and then again during <a href="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2012/11/stack-exchange-partners-with-denver-startup-week/">Denver Startup Week</a> last month. So we thought it was about time to bring the party to Europe.</p>
<p>If you’re in or around Berlin on Dec. 5 (or just want to book a last-minute trip), come clink glasses with us at Betahaus (Prinzessinnenstraße 19-20) from 5:30 p.m. – 8:30 p.m. While there, we’ll also be launching our first official translation of Careers 2.0 for German candidates and employers.</p>
<p>Join us for a fun night where you can…</p>
<ul>
<li>Meet other Stack Overflow users and pick the brains of our awesome developers</li>
<li>Sit in on educational talks and demonstrations from our devs as they discuss how they <a href="http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/156432/feedback-wanted-careers-in-german">localized Careers 2.0 for a German audience</a> (you can check out a preview at <a href="http://careers.stackoverflow.com/de">careers.stackoverflow.com/de</a>)</li>
<li title="since the party ends at 8:30, you may need to enjoy very slowly in order for the enjoyment to last all night">Enjoy free food and drinks all night</li>
<li>Rock out to tunes provided by SoundCloud’s DJs</li>
</ul>
<p>Hope to see you there!</p>
<p><strong>Let us know you&#8217;re coming &#8211; <a href="http://careers.stackoverflow.com/launch"><span title="Nothing like French initialisms for getting a German audience!">RSVP</span> by December 1</a></strong></p>
<p><a href="http://careers.stackoverflow.com/launch"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-12527" src="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/wp-content/uploads/de-Stack-Overflow-Careers-728x902.png" alt="" width="728" height="90" /></a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>SE Podcast #37 &#8211; Back At It, Again</title>
		<link>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2012/11/se-podcast-37/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2012/11/se-podcast-37/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 20 Nov 2012 17:36:29 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alex Miller</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[podcasts]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.stackoverflow.com/?p=12537</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Welcome back!  We&#8217;re actually back to a fairly normal podcast this week and want to bring you back up to speed on Stack Exchange after our adventures the last few weeks.  What&#8217;s on the agenda? What&#8217;s new this week? Starting with the review queue and its new segment: the reopen queue! It&#8217;s exactly what it [...]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Welcome back!  We&#8217;re actually back to a fairly normal podcast this week and want to bring you back up to speed on Stack Exchange after our adventures the last few weeks.  What&#8217;s on the agenda? What&#8217;s new this week?</p>
<ul>
<li>Starting with the review queue and its new segment: the reopen queue! It&#8217;s exactly what it sounds like (the reverse of the close queue). David and Jay walk Joel through the review queue and its features.</li>
<li>One of the problems with the review queue is people clicking &#8220;Looks good&#8221; all the way through just so they can get a badge. Who would do such a thing?<br />
[Spoiler alert: We will talk about the review queue for a really long time.]</li>
<li>Ideally we want to teach you, instead of building something that quietly ignores you when you do something wrong. In certain queues, we use fake review items that catch you when you choose the wrong option.</li>
<li>There are lots of conversations about this going on on Meta, and we&#8217;ll continue to look at the issues and work on solving them so we can fix this part of the game. (Remember flag weight?)</li>
<li>The other new item on the review queue is the Community Evaluation queue, aka the &#8220;Judge Your Site&#8221; queue. It&#8217;s meant to replace the site self-evaluation meta post, which Joel tells us all about. It&#8217;s currently live on Ask Ubuntu and will soon be tested on other sites. Coming soon to a site near you!</li>
<li><a href="http://money.stackexchange.com">Money</a> and <a href="http://answers.onstartups.com">OnStartups</a> have very high quality competition, so they are at a disadvantage no matter how dedicated their users are. They&#8217;re good sites, but they may be stuck in beta for a while.</li>
<li>Another example of this is <a href="http://judaism.stackexchange.com/">Judaism</a>. The answers are all excellent, and the best on the internet on the subject. It&#8217;s very small, but it&#8217;s growing.</li>
<li>Sites need to go &#8220;beyond the blogs&#8221; &#8211; to find content that nobody would ever bother to write a blog post about. The Money site can&#8217;t compete with all the excellent finance blogs on the internet, so it has to go beyond them.</li>
<li>People who care about our sites should be focusing on writing great answers that make the internet a truly better place, and not on pleasing every single asker that has a little question.</li>
<li>We&#8217;ve only got through one of the things on our list so far. We&#8217;ll try one more. Not SSL; it&#8217;ll be even more boring, especially for the people who made it this far.</li>
<li>Also Michael Pryor and his wife just had a baby!</li>
<li>We beat Hurricane Sandy back with a stick, so we&#8217;re having a victory party tonight. (Stack Exchange skipped town, but helped a little bit, so we get to go.)</li>
<li>If you tune in next week, you&#8217;ll hear about hats, our struggles and/or victory with SSL and possible ensuing party, and our victory over the German language.</li>
</ul>
<p><iframe src="http://w.soundcloud.com/player/?url=http%3A%2F%2Fapi.soundcloud.com%2Ftracks%2F68172637&amp;show_artwork=true" frameborder="no" scrolling="no" width="100%" height="166"></iframe></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<slash:comments>8</slash:comments>
			<enclosure url="http://www.podtrac.com/pts/redirect.mp3/feeds.soundcloud.com/stream/68172637-stack-exchange-stack-exchange-podcast-37.mp3" length="48998705" type="audio/mpeg" />
		<itunes:duration>0:51:02</itunes:duration>
		<itunes:subtitle>Welcome back!  We&#8217;re actually back to a fairly normal podcast this week and want to bring you back up to speed on Stack Exchange after our adventures the last few weeks.  What&#8217;s on the agenda? What&#8217;s new this week?

Starting with t[...]</itunes:subtitle>
		<itunes:summary>Welcome back!  We&#8217;re actually back to a fairly normal podcast this week and want to bring you back up to speed on Stack Exchange after our adventures the last few weeks.  What&#8217;s on the agenda? What&#8217;s new this week?

Starting with the review queue and its new segment: the reopen queue! It&#8217;s exactly what it sounds like (the reverse of the close queue). David and Jay walk Joel through the review queue and its features.
One of the problems with the review queue is people clicking &#8220;Looks good&#8221; all the way through just so they can get a badge. Who would do such a thing?
[Spoiler alert: We will talk about the review queue for a really long time.]
Ideally we want to teach you, instead of building something that quietly ignores you when you do something wrong. In certain queues, we use fake review items that catch you when you choose the wrong option.
There are lots of conversations about this going on on Meta, and we&#8217;ll continue to look at the issues and work on solving them so we can fix this part of the game. (Remember flag weight?)
The other new item on the review queue is the Community Evaluation queue, aka the &#8220;Judge Your Site&#8221; queue. It&#8217;s meant to replace the site self-evaluation meta post, which Joel tells us all about. It&#8217;s currently live on Ask Ubuntu and will soon be tested on other sites. Coming soon to a site near you!
Money and OnStartups have very high quality competition, so they are at a disadvantage no matter how dedicated their users are. They&#8217;re good sites, but they may be stuck in beta for a while.
Another example of this is Judaism. The answers are all excellent, and the best on the internet on the subject. It&#8217;s very small, but it&#8217;s growing.
Sites need to go &#8220;beyond the blogs&#8221; &#8211; to find content that nobody would ever bother to write a blog post about. The Money site can&#8217;t compete with all the excellent finance blogs on the internet, so it has to go beyond them.
People who care about our sites should be focusing on writing great answers that make the internet a truly better place, and not on pleasing every single asker that has a little question.
We&#8217;ve only got through one of the things on our list so far. We&#8217;ll try one more. Not SSL; it&#8217;ll be even more boring, especially for the people who made it this far.
Also Michael Pryor and his wife just had a baby!
We beat Hurricane Sandy back with a stick, so we&#8217;re having a victory party tonight. (Stack Exchange skipped town, but helped a little bit, so we get to go.)
If you tune in next week, you&#8217;ll hear about hats, our struggles and/or victory with SSL and possible ensuing party, and our victory over the German language.

</itunes:summary>
		<itunes:keywords>podcasts</itunes:keywords>
		<itunes:author>The Stack Exchange Team</itunes:author>
		<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
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		<title>Get rid of ads you don’t like (and encourage ads you do like)</title>
		<link>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2012/11/get-rid-of-ads-you-dont-like-and-encourage-ads-you-do-like/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2012/11/get-rid-of-ads-you-dont-like-and-encourage-ads-you-do-like/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 12 Nov 2012 16:13:40 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Korneel Bouman</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[announcement]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.stackoverflow.com/?p=12480</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Ads. Like &#8216;em or not, they keep the lights on. As readers, ads might direct us to a valuable service or product, or they might just be a distracting annoyance. For publishers, ads can provide an added service to their audience and a significant revenue stream, but only if the ads reach their intended audience, [...]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Ads. Like &#8216;em or not, they keep the lights on.</p>
<p>As readers, ads might direct us to a valuable service or product, or <a href="http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/143130/is-it-possible-to-remove-the-careers-banner-with-the-dying-starfish">they might just be a distracting annoyance</a>. For publishers, ads can provide an added service to their audience and a significant revenue stream, but only if the ads reach their intended audience, and that audience interacts with them. For the advertisers themselves, ads can be a great way to generate sales or awareness, but only if people don’t ignore them. And therein lies the problem: lousy targeting, over-exposure and distracting ad formats have made people prone to do just that, which significantly reduces the benefits to all involved.</p>
<p>To make ads work, you have to ensure their relevance to the audience you’re advertising to, which has always been our guiding principle here at Stack Overflow (that, and not have them be annoying). But even then, not every ad is relevant to everybody, and we’ve been working on a way to fix this. We want you to only see ads you want to see, which in turn means that our advertisers will only advertise to people who are actually interested in what they have to sell (which is sort of the holy grail of display advertising).</p>
<p><a href="http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/24643/rate-the-quality-of-the-ads">And now this is possible</a>. We’ve worked with <a href="http://www.adzerk.com/">Adzerk</a> (our ad server) to come up with a widget that lets you either up- or down-vote an ad (widget will display when you hover over the ad).</p>
<p><img class="wp-image-12481 alignnone" src="http://i.stack.imgur.com/926J9.png" title="you wouldn't down-vote a PUPPY, would you?" /></p>
<p>If you up vote an ad (particularly if a large number of people do) we know the ad is on the right track. If you down vote one, we’ll ask you why, and won&#8217;t show you that ad again.</p>
<p><img class="alignnone  wp-image-12482" src="http://i.stack.imgur.com/KNtoj.png" title="of course you would. Stupid puppy."/></p>
<p>Apart from improving your experience, this will also provide a wealth of information as to which ads and advertisers work and which ones don’t, and it will ensure we avoid wasting our advertisers&#8217; money and your time (we hope!). All good things.</p>
<p>There are a few things to note:</p>
<ul>
<li>Not all ads are votable <em>yet</em>: some high volume campaigns closed before we decided to roll this out, and we want to make sure we show those ads as many times as we promised to. Until we are able to better gauge the exact effect this feature will have on our overall inventory, we’ll let these run their course as originally sold.</li>
<li>The house ads promoting other SE sites and new proposals will also be exempt from voting (these are generated dynamically, and down voting it would mean you’d never see new proposals or sites again).</li>
<li>And because we keep track of your voting through a cookie your settings will not carry over from one computer to another, and you’ll lose your preferences if you clear out your cookies.</li>
</ul>
<p>Oh &#8211; and like voting elsewhere on Stack Exchange, voting on advertisements is completely anonymous: voting on an ad will never send any personally-identifying information to the owner of the ad (or even us!).</p>
<p>Now, go forth and vote!</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>SE Podcast #36 &#8211; We Got Hit by a Hurricane</title>
		<link>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2012/11/se-podcast-36-we-got-hit-by-a-hurricane/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2012/11/se-podcast-36-we-got-hit-by-a-hurricane/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 09 Nov 2012 17:07:58 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alex Miller</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[podcasts]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.stackoverflow.com/?p=12499</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[So as you may have heard in the news, the east coast got hit pretty hard by Hurricane Sandy &#8211; in particular, our datacenter in Lower Manhattan was almost knocked entirely offline.  If not for the incredible efforts of Fog Creek Software, Squarespace, and Peer1 (the datacenter) there would have certainly been days of outages [...]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>So as you may have heard in the news, the east coast got hit pretty hard by Hurricane Sandy &#8211; in particular, our datacenter in Lower Manhattan was almost knocked entirely offline.  If not for the incredible efforts of Fog Creek Software, Squarespace, and Peer1 (the datacenter) there would have certainly been days of outages for everyone involved.</p>
<p>We&#8217;ve got a ton of people from Stack, Fog Creek and Squarespace on to tell the CRAZY story of exactly what happened last week! Guests include: <strong>David Fullerton</strong><strong>,</strong> VP Engineering at Stack Exchange; <strong>Geoff Dalgas &amp; Nick Craver, </strong>both core developers at Stack Exchange;<strong> Alex Miller</strong>; <strong>Michael Pryo</strong>r; <strong>Mendy Berkowitz</strong>, lead sysadmin for Fog Creek; <strong>Babak Ghaheremanpour</strong>, longtime Creeker; <strong>Anthony Casalena</strong>, CEO and founder of <a href="http://www.squarespace.com/" target="_blank">Squarespace</a>.</p>
<p>We&#8217;re planning on telling the whole story of Hurricane Sandy &#8211; it&#8217;s roughly in chronological order here</p>
<ul>
<li>We are from New York, and all of our offices and equipment are located there. Hurricane Sandy recently hit us, as you may have heard.</li>
<li>We go back all the way to Monday night, 10/29. Nick got the first communications from Peer1, our datacenter, which was warning everyone that the power was going out for everything south of 34th street.</li>
<li>Monday night, we thought all was safe in sound. Stack Exchange had some failover plans in place, however, as you heard about <a href="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2012/10/se-podcast-34/" target="_blank">on a previous podcast</a>.</li>
<li>On the Fog Creek side, things were still relatively calm. They were basically blindsided, because the datacenter was confident that they had generator fuel for &#8220;like, days&#8221;.</li>
<li>Then the storm hit. There was wind and a little bit of rain. Everything in Zone A got flooded basically immediately, as predicted, but if you didn&#8217;t live in Zone A you didn&#8217;t really notice.</li>
<li>Michael Pryor&#8217;s foreshadowing. He saw a Hacker News post saying that Internap, another datacenter, was down &#8211; and started making plans to protect Fog Creek if Peer1 went down.</li>
<li>Suddenly, we get word that the generator only has thirty minutes of fuel left.</li>
<li>Mike Mazzei was the only Peer1 staffer there at the time, and he was stretched pretty thin. He is basically a super hero and ended up saving the day.</li>
<li>Anthony managed to get exactly one email on Tuesday morning, and it happened to be about running out of fuel in the middle of the day (where he had previously thought they had a few days of fuel to spare).</li>
<li>&#8220;Let me tell you what it looked like when I showed up.&#8221; Michael describes the scene on Broad St. for us.</li>
<li>Based on flawed information from the NOC, Fog Creek makes plans to shut everything down at 10:45AM.</li>
<li>Bradford was the only sysadmin who was awake and connected. He said we had to start doing a controlled shutdown</li>
<li>Mike has the idea that if we can get the fuel up to the generator, we can keep everything online.</li>
<li>Someone from Squarespace found empty 55-gallon drums on Craigslist and brought them down to the datacenter. The first attempt is pushing these barrels of diesel up the stairs.</li>
<li>The building&#8217;s major task was getting the water pumped out of the basement, so at first Fog Creek and Squarespace and Peer1 were able to work on the fuel issue relatively unfettered.</li>
<li>Fog Creek decides to bring their servers back up, since they had people on the ground in the datacenter now to monitor the situation</li>
<li> The bucket brigade begins!</li>
<li>Michael goes home and sleeps for three hours. He then heads back to Peer1 and checks the generator tank which is only a quarter full&#8230;</li>
<li>Joel tells us about trying to raise the alarm with incommunicado sysadmins Mendy and Sven and get them back online</li>
<li>Sven starts working on with some others was moving Trello onto AWS</li>
<li>Michael tells us about how lucky he got with the Fog Creek fishtank during last year&#8217;s power outage. Another example of how we were very lucky to be accidentally prepared for this event.</li>
<li>Everyone laughs at us for having datacenters in Manhattan, but the clear benefit is that we had the physical ability to make things happen because the employees of the company are close, and downtown Manhattan is a priority to get back up and running, resources-wise.</li>
<li>Wednesday morning was the day where we had the day laborers. Michael noticed that there were people carrying fuel that he didn&#8217;t recognize, and then they started carrying our fuel to our tank. Turns out they were day laborers, and they needed payin&#8217;.</li>
<li>The system was in place, and it worked &#8211; we put a ton of fuel on the roof.  At that point, we thought there would be a happy ending.</li>
<li>Enter Thursday. Anthony wakes up to find that the workers are not allowed in the building.</li>
<li>The building management and ownership just didn&#8217;t understand what a datacenter does. We were &#8220;the telco guys&#8221;.</li>
<li>Things go south with the building management and ownership because of a conflict with the day laborers, because the original company who hired the day laborers didn&#8217;t pay them.</li>
<li>Everyone stays quiet and tries to just stay out of the way. Mike Mazzei gets the building manager to let the bucket brigade resume using only the eleven people that were already in the building &#8211; no outside help was allowed.</li>
<li>We were allowed to do this until suddenly we weren&#8217;t anymore. Mike gives a &#8220;we did all we could&#8221; speech and everyone prepares to inform customers that the outage was inevitable…</li>
<li>More army stories from Joel: the biggest challenge in a crisis situation is the &#8220;Fog of War&#8221; &#8211; 5% good communication and 95% rumor flying around.</li>
<li>The building finally gets the pump going and fills the header, and then we&#8217;re basically okay.</li>
<li>When Mike Mazzei got frazzled, Joel went ballistic on Peer1 corporate. We discuss how they should have handled the situation and put in more support.</li>
<li>Another army story! When it hits the fan, you find yourself doing things that have a 1% probability of success, but it&#8217;s all you&#8217;ve got so you do it anyway.</li>
<li> STATUS QUO: Thursday night, the pump gets going. Friday and throughout the weekend, things are calm. Work continues on all the contingency plans, but the situation is more or less stabilized.</li>
<li>The overarching key is communication, not only internally within your company, but with your customers.</li>
</ul>
<p><br/></p>
<p><iframe src="http://w.soundcloud.com/player/?url=http%3A%2F%2Fapi.soundcloud.com%2Ftracks%2F66762703&amp;show_artwork=true" frameborder="no" scrolling="no" width="100%" height="166"></iframe><br />
<br/></p>
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		<slash:comments>17</slash:comments>
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		<itunes:duration>1:21:40</itunes:duration>
		<itunes:subtitle>So as you may have heard in the news, the east coast got hit pretty hard by Hurricane Sandy &#8211; in particular, our datacenter in Lower Manhattan was almost knocked entirely offline.  If not for the incredible efforts of Fog Creek Software, Squar[...]</itunes:subtitle>
		<itunes:summary>So as you may have heard in the news, the east coast got hit pretty hard by Hurricane Sandy &#8211; in particular, our datacenter in Lower Manhattan was almost knocked entirely offline.  If not for the incredible efforts of Fog Creek Software, Squarespace, and Peer1 (the datacenter) there would have certainly been days of outages for everyone involved.
We&#8217;ve got a ton of people from Stack, Fog Creek and Squarespace on to tell the CRAZY story of exactly what happened last week! Guests include: David Fullerton, VP Engineering at Stack Exchange; Geoff Dalgas &#38; Nick Craver, both core developers at Stack Exchange; Alex Miller; Michael Pryor; Mendy Berkowitz, lead sysadmin for Fog Creek; Babak Ghaheremanpour, longtime Creeker; Anthony Casalena, CEO and founder of Squarespace.
We&#8217;re planning on telling the whole story of Hurricane Sandy &#8211; it&#8217;s roughly in chronological order here

We are from New York, and all of our offices and equipment are located there. Hurricane Sandy recently hit us, as you may have heard.
We go back all the way to Monday night, 10/29. Nick got the first communications from Peer1, our datacenter, which was warning everyone that the power was going out for everything south of 34th street.
Monday night, we thought all was safe in sound. Stack Exchange had some failover plans in place, however, as you heard about on a previous podcast.
On the Fog Creek side, things were still relatively calm. They were basically blindsided, because the datacenter was confident that they had generator fuel for &#8220;like, days&#8221;.
Then the storm hit. There was wind and a little bit of rain. Everything in Zone A got flooded basically immediately, as predicted, but if you didn&#8217;t live in Zone A you didn&#8217;t really notice.
Michael Pryor&#8217;s foreshadowing. He saw a Hacker News post saying that Internap, another datacenter, was down &#8211; and started making plans to protect Fog Creek if Peer1 went down.
Suddenly, we get word that the generator only has thirty minutes of fuel left.
Mike Mazzei was the only Peer1 staffer there at the time, and he was stretched pretty thin. He is basically a super hero and ended up saving the day.
Anthony managed to get exactly one email on Tuesday morning, and it happened to be about running out of fuel in the middle of the day (where he had previously thought they had a few days of fuel to spare).
&#8220;Let me tell you what it looked like when I showed up.&#8221; Michael describes the scene on Broad St. for us.
Based on flawed information from the NOC, Fog Creek makes plans to shut everything down at 10:45AM.
Bradford was the only sysadmin who was awake and connected. He said we had to start doing a controlled shutdown
Mike has the idea that if we can get the fuel up to the generator, we can keep everything online.
Someone from Squarespace found empty 55-gallon drums on Craigslist and brought them down to the datacenter. The first attempt is pushing these barrels of diesel up the stairs.
The building&#8217;s major task was getting the water pumped out of the basement, so at first Fog Creek and Squarespace and Peer1 were able to work on the fuel issue relatively unfettered.
Fog Creek decides to bring their servers back up, since they had people on the ground in the datacenter now to monitor the situation
 The bucket brigade begins!
Michael goes home and sleeps for three hours. He then heads back to Peer1 and checks the generator tank which is only a quarter full&#8230;
Joel tells us about trying to raise the alarm with incommunicado sysadmins Mendy and Sven and get them back online
Sven starts working on with some others was moving Trello onto AWS
Michael tells us about how lucky he got with the Fog Creek fishtank during last year&#8217;s power outage. Another example of how we were very lucky to be accidentally prepared for this event.
Everyone laughs at us for having datacenters in Manhattan, but the clear benefit is that we had the physical ability t[...]</itunes:summary>
		<itunes:keywords>podcasts</itunes:keywords>
		<itunes:author>The Stack Exchange Team</itunes:author>
		<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
		<itunes:block>no</itunes:block>
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		<title>Stack Exchange partners with Denver Startup Week</title>
		<link>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2012/11/stack-exchange-partners-with-denver-startup-week/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2012/11/stack-exchange-partners-with-denver-startup-week/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 02 Nov 2012 22:09:07 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Bethany Marzewski</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[background]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[denver]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.stackoverflow.com/?p=12452</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[  The Mile High City was buzzing last week as it hosted its first ever Denver Startup Week. With more than 80 events hosted by startups all around the city, the week attracted hundreds of entrepreneurs from the Colorado area. Since our Denver office just opened in August, this was a perfect time for us [...]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p style="text-align: center"> <img class="size-full wp-image-12455 aligncenter" src="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/wp-content/uploads/denver-blog-intro.png" alt="" width="650" height="200" /></p>
<p>The Mile High City was buzzing last week as it hosted its first ever <a href="http://denverstartupweek.com/">Denver Startup Week</a>. With more than 80 events hosted by startups all around the city, the week attracted hundreds of entrepreneurs from the Colorado area. Since our Denver office just opened in August, this was a perfect time for us to get to know some of our new neighbors a little better.</p>
<p><strong>Startup Job Fair</strong></p>
<p>On Tuesday, October 23, after our quick spot on <a href="http://www.9news.com/money/295707/344/QA-company-now-hiring-in-Denver">Channel 9 News</a>, we set up shop at the Startup Job Fair to recruit even more awesome talent to our company. After two hours, we brought in nearly 50 resumes—thanks to everyone who showed up! In case you couldn’t make it, it’s still not too late to apply! <a href="http://stackexchange.com/about/hiring">Check out our job openings here</a>.</p>
<p><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-12457" src="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/wp-content/uploads/denver-blog-1.jpg" alt="" width="650" height="433" title="From left to right: Diandra Partridge, Alicia Del Pardo, Joseph Sondag, Melissa Noland" /></p>
<p><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-12458" src="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/wp-content/uploads/denver-blog-2.jpg" alt="" width="650" height="433" /></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><strong>Denver Startup Crawl</strong></p>
<p>More than 20 companies participated in a Startup Crawl that led registrants all around Denver to check out the great office spaces and have a beverage or two. Despite the freezing rain/snow, we hosted more than 40 attendees at our Stack Exchange Denver HQ—and our warm, spiked apple cider was a big hit. If you didn’t make it this time, keep your eyes peeled for our next event… though we can’t promise we’ll have bacon apple whiskey tartlets like this again.</p>
<p><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-12459" src="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/wp-content/uploads/denver-blog-3.jpg" alt="" width="650" height="433" title="It's true: bacon makes everything better" /></p>
<p><strong>Class: How to Hire Developers in a Competitive Market<br />
</strong></p>
<p>Thursday boasted our biggest event of all—more than 50 of you joined us in our office to learn how to hire programmers in this tough market. <a href="http://stackexchange.com/users/383041/guyzee">Guy Zerega</a> (National Sales Manager) and <a href="http://stackexchange.com/users/77247/korneel-bouman">Korneel Bouman</a> (Director of Customer Support and Sales Operations) flew out from our New York hub to offer up tips on tech recruitment and writing good developer job listings. Complete with brunch (not to mention a full Bloody Mary and mimosa bar), we hope this class helped a few of your with your own recruitment needs. You can <a href="http://www.skillshare.com/How-to-Hire-Developers-in-a-Competitive-Market/5414387">sign up for our watchlist</a> for future classes here.</p>
<p><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-12460" src="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/wp-content/uploads/denver-blog-4.jpg" alt="" width="650" height="433" /></p>
<p><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-12461" src="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/wp-content/uploads/denver-blog-5.jpg" alt="" width="650" height="737" /></p>
<p>Thanks to everyone who attended and helped make Denver Startup Week a success! You can check out the <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/stackexchange/sets/72157631903818852/">rest of our photos here</a>. We hope to see you at future events going forward next year.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>SE Podcast #35 &#8211; A Biscuit Away from Jerry Stiller</title>
		<link>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2012/10/se-podcast-35-a-biscuit-away-from-jerry-stiller/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2012/10/se-podcast-35-a-biscuit-away-from-jerry-stiller/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 29 Oct 2012 15:22:49 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alex Miller</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[podcasts]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.stackoverflow.com/?p=12448</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Welcome to Stack Exchange podcast #35 with special guest Scott Hanselman. We also have your loyal cohosts, Jay Hanlon and David Fullerton. And Joel Spolsky? What exactly would Scott say that he does here? Scott Hanselman runs a podcast that doesn&#8217;t waste your time… unlike we have for the first nine minutes. Let&#8217;s talk about [...]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Welcome to Stack Exchange podcast #35 with special guest Scott Hanselman. We also have your loyal cohosts, Jay Hanlon and David Fullerton. And Joel Spolsky?</p>
<ul>
<li>What exactly would Scott say that he does here?</li>
<li>Scott Hanselman runs a podcast that doesn&#8217;t waste your time… unlike we have for the first nine minutes.</li>
<li>Let&#8217;s talk about Scott&#8217;s recent presentation at Webstock! Or we&#8217;ll talk about how Scott is <strong>not</strong> a developer evangelist, despite popular belief. He is a community manager for ASP.net, IIS, anything angle bracket or curly brace related, anything &#8220;webby&#8221;.</li>
<li>You can buy a single Q-Tip or Lego lightsaber on Amazon. (Most Lego fans don&#8217;t like Lego Star Wars.)</li>
<li>Why do we have both Programming.SE and Stack Overflow? Joel tells us about the historical reasoning behind it. It&#8217;s a party line: Stack Overflow is for things you do at the computer, and Programmers is for things you do at the whiteboard.</li>
<li>Do people still use Twitter? We thought they&#8217;d all moved on to App.net, but that&#8217;s only for people who had fifty dollars (that they didn&#8217;t spend on the new iPod connector).</li>
<li>&#8220;Do you realize that you are a biscuit away from turning into Jerry Stiller?&#8221;</li>
<li>Scott works remotely. Joel inquires: how does he make that work? Scott shares some tips! (Possibly… <a href="http://www.hanselman.com/blog/30TipsForSuccessfulCommunicationAsARemoteWorker.aspx" target="_blank">a blog post</a>?)</li>
<li>One of Scott&#8217;s biggest tips is to use more face-to-face communication instead of text-based. We don&#8217;t necessarily agree, and so we explore the topic in depth. Jay agrees, that debates and discussions are not productive in text-based chat.</li>
<li>Scott will probably teach Computer Science when he retires… but then, he&#8217;ll be allowed to have an opinion!</li>
<li>Back on the &#8220;working remotely&#8221; topic. There&#8217;s a difference between being on a distributed team and being the remote person on a not-so-distributed team. The latter is harder! Scott insists on camera at every meeting.</li>
<li>We want to spend as much as we possibly can on remote collaboration, so we talk about some of the tech you can use to accomplish that.</li>
<li>Windows 8 is coming out on Friday (or for the past year, if you are a developer or you tried to download it). How is it? Is it awesome, or did someone move everyone&#8217;s cheese? Listen in to find out… and then move on to a general discussion of changing user interfaces and what that does to users who are loyal to companies.</li>
<li>Let&#8217;s talk about something else that isn&#8217;t twitter! Scott and Stack Exchange have in common that they provide an audience for answered questions, so Q&amp;A isn&#8217;t one-on-one communication. It makes it useful for everyone. Stay tuned for the Joel Theory of Blogging. Is twitter the decline of modern blogging?</li>
<li>Joel spoke to a bunch of recruiters in London, where he told them that their job is to make the company awesome enough that great candidates come to them. Joel has a lot of projects, remarks Scott, and we discuss them &#8211; including <a href="http://trello.com/" target="_blank">Trello</a> and what makes it great, and Scott&#8217;s suggestions for improvement.</li>
<li>What has everyone been doing since Joel was on the road? Some stuff we already talked about and some stuff we can&#8217;t talk about yet.</li>
<li>Check out <a href="http://thisdeveloperslife.com/" target="_blank">This Developer&#8217;s Life</a>. It&#8217;s the best knock-off out there.</li>
</ul>
<p>&nbsp;<br />
<iframe width="100%" height="166" scrolling="no" frameborder="no" src="http://w.soundcloud.com/player/?url=http%3A%2F%2Fapi.soundcloud.com%2Ftracks%2F65220816&#038;show_artwork=true"></iframe><br />
&nbsp;</p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2012/10/se-podcast-35-a-biscuit-away-from-jerry-stiller/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>13</slash:comments>
			<enclosure url="http://www.podtrac.com/pts/redirect.mp3/feeds.soundcloud.com/stream/65220816-stack-exchange-stack-exchange-podcast-35.mp3" length="48755456" type="audio/mpeg" />
		<itunes:duration>0:50:47</itunes:duration>
		<itunes:subtitle>Welcome to Stack Exchange podcast #35 with special guest Scott Hanselman. We also have your loyal cohosts, Jay Hanlon and David Fullerton. And Joel Spolsky?

What exactly would Scott say that he does here?
Scott Hanselman runs a podcast that doesn[...]</itunes:subtitle>
		<itunes:summary>Welcome to Stack Exchange podcast #35 with special guest Scott Hanselman. We also have your loyal cohosts, Jay Hanlon and David Fullerton. And Joel Spolsky?

What exactly would Scott say that he does here?
Scott Hanselman runs a podcast that doesn&#8217;t waste your time… unlike we have for the first nine minutes.
Let&#8217;s talk about Scott&#8217;s recent presentation at Webstock! Or we&#8217;ll talk about how Scott is not a developer evangelist, despite popular belief. He is a community manager for ASP.net, IIS, anything angle bracket or curly brace related, anything &#8220;webby&#8221;.
You can buy a single Q-Tip or Lego lightsaber on Amazon. (Most Lego fans don&#8217;t like Lego Star Wars.)
Why do we have both Programming.SE and Stack Overflow? Joel tells us about the historical reasoning behind it. It&#8217;s a party line: Stack Overflow is for things you do at the computer, and Programmers is for things you do at the whiteboard.
Do people still use Twitter? We thought they&#8217;d all moved on to App.net, but that&#8217;s only for people who had fifty dollars (that they didn&#8217;t spend on the new iPod connector).
&#8220;Do you realize that you are a biscuit away from turning into Jerry Stiller?&#8221;
Scott works remotely. Joel inquires: how does he make that work? Scott shares some tips! (Possibly… a blog post?)
One of Scott&#8217;s biggest tips is to use more face-to-face communication instead of text-based. We don&#8217;t necessarily agree, and so we explore the topic in depth. Jay agrees, that debates and discussions are not productive in text-based chat.
Scott will probably teach Computer Science when he retires… but then, he&#8217;ll be allowed to have an opinion!
Back on the &#8220;working remotely&#8221; topic. There&#8217;s a difference between being on a distributed team and being the remote person on a not-so-distributed team. The latter is harder! Scott insists on camera at every meeting.
We want to spend as much as we possibly can on remote collaboration, so we talk about some of the tech you can use to accomplish that.
Windows 8 is coming out on Friday (or for the past year, if you are a developer or you tried to download it). How is it? Is it awesome, or did someone move everyone&#8217;s cheese? Listen in to find out… and then move on to a general discussion of changing user interfaces and what that does to users who are loyal to companies.
Let&#8217;s talk about something else that isn&#8217;t twitter! Scott and Stack Exchange have in common that they provide an audience for answered questions, so Q&#38;A isn&#8217;t one-on-one communication. It makes it useful for everyone. Stay tuned for the Joel Theory of Blogging. Is twitter the decline of modern blogging?
Joel spoke to a bunch of recruiters in London, where he told them that their job is to make the company awesome enough that great candidates come to them. Joel has a lot of projects, remarks Scott, and we discuss them &#8211; including Trello and what makes it great, and Scott&#8217;s suggestions for improvement.
What has everyone been doing since Joel was on the road? Some stuff we already talked about and some stuff we can&#8217;t talk about yet.
Check out This Developer&#8217;s Life. It&#8217;s the best knock-off out there.

&#160;

&#160;</itunes:summary>
		<itunes:keywords>podcasts</itunes:keywords>
		<itunes:author>The Stack Exchange Team</itunes:author>
		<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
		<itunes:block>no</itunes:block>
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		<title>Take the Super User Windows 8 Challenge</title>
		<link>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2012/10/super-user-win8-challenge/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2012/10/super-user-win8-challenge/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 26 Oct 2012 16:27:28 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Shog9</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[promotion]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[superuser.com]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.stackoverflow.com/?p=12436</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Well, Windows 8 is finally available in the wild. Of course, developers have had access to it for quite a while &#8211; our ongoing Apptivate contest would be looking pretty sad otherwise. But now you can actually buy the upgrade for your home PC if you&#8217;re so inclined, or for your mom&#8217;s PC if you [...]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Well, <a href="http://windows.microsoft.com">Windows 8</a> is finally available <a href="http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2411443,00.asp">in the wild</a>. Of course, developers have had access to it for quite a while &#8211; <a href="http://apptivate.ms/">our ongoing Apptivate contest</a> would be looking pretty sad otherwise. But now you can actually <em>buy </em>the upgrade for your home PC if you&#8217;re so inclined, or for your mom&#8217;s PC if you haven&#8217;t been getting enough tech-support calls from her recently&#8230; </p>
<p>In recognition of this, <a href="http://blog.superuser.com/2012/10/22/windows-8-challenge/">Super User is running its own little promotion</a>: </p>
<blockquote><p><a href="http://win8challenge.com/">We’re having a party</a> and you’re invited. Ask and answer questions to complete the challenge levels, and complete different tasks like editing, voting, and blogging to win the eight tile challenges. Each level you beat and each tile you finish enters you for sweet prizes, including the grand prize of a Microsoft Surface RT!</p></blockquote>
<p>Let&#8217;s face it: Windows 8 is a bit&#8230; <i>Different.</i> I haven&#8217;t upgraded yet &#8211; it took Microsoft decades to finally get the taskbar working right, and I&#8217;m a bit reluctant to give that up. But if you do decide to take the plunge, <a href="http://superuser.com/">Super User</a> is <a href="http://blog.superuser.com/2012/08/27/the-super-users-windows-8-guide/">well-prepared</a> to help you through it &#8211; or if you&#8217;ve already been knee-deep in the change for a while (say, because of that app contest I mentioned above), perhaps you&#8217;ve learned something that could help others. Either way, why not double your pleasure by earning a <a href="http://win8challenge.com/">t-shirt, weird-looking mouse or other nifty gear</a> in the process?</p>
<h1><a href="http://blog.superuser.com/2012/10/22/windows-8-challenge/">Introducing the Windows 8 Challenge</a> on the Super User Blog</h1>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>SE Podcast #34 &#8211; Kyle Brandt and Nick Craver</title>
		<link>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2012/10/se-podcast-34/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2012/10/se-podcast-34/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 23 Oct 2012 14:15:15 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alex Miller</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[podcasts]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.stackoverflow.com/?p=12420</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[On the show this week are Kyle Brandt and Nick Craver, two SE employees who are heading up our systems upgrades and relocations &#8211; they&#8217;ll dish all kinds of details on our infrastructure, plus plenty of chat about other mildly relevant things. First up on the agenda: Quantcast! Five minutes before we started recording, we [...]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>On the show this week are Kyle Brandt and Nick Craver, two SE employees who are heading up our systems upgrades and relocations &#8211; they&#8217;ll dish all kinds of details on our infrastructure, plus plenty of chat about other mildly relevant things.</p>
<ul>
<li>First up on the agenda: Quantcast! Five minutes before we started recording, we noticed that Quantcast is ranking our network at #100! (or at least we were for a bit)</li>
<li>If all that additional traffic should cause our New York data center to go down, what will happen, Kyle? Great segue, Joel! We are working on a system for failing over to our datacenter in Corvallis, OR.</li>
<li>Our New York datacenter is also out of room for us, so we needed to have a failover system in place so the sites could stay up while we move all the equipment to the new datacenter.</li>
<li>Nick Craver runs at a hundred degrees, no problem. (Extensive conversation about temperature in datacenters ensues.)</li>
<li>Google <a href="http://www.theverge.com/2012/10/17/3515714/google-data-centers-street-view" target="_blank">opened up its datacenters via Street View</a>, by the way. Cool.</li>
<li>Now back to more details about the failover. The word &#8220;splurt&#8221; is used. Eventually Joel lays out the whole process step by step. In the ideal situation, when our failover is planned ahead of time and not due to sudden meteor attack, the whole thing should take between five and fifteen minutes. Afterwards, we come up in read-only mode, at which point someone can manually switch us back into normal mode &#8211; or not!</li>
<li>Nick walks us through the sweet new equipment in the Corvallis datacenter. (How much would you pay for one of our original servers, hand-built and signed by @codinghorror?)</li>
<li>When we DO fail over to Oregon, the moderators come with us! And they love Stephen King movies! What a segue.</li>
<li>We&#8217;ve got a new <a href="http://genealogy.stackexchange.com/" target="_blank">Genealogy site</a>, and it&#8217;s hard to spell, but the site is doing really well.  There are some <a href="http://genealogy.stackexchange.com/questions/157/how-should-i-record-sex-change-gender-reassignment" target="_blank">very interesting questions</a> on the Genealogy site, about many issues related to genealogy: how to use its software, how to find information, whether to distribute sensitive family information, etc.</li>
<li>Robotics is coming soon! We&#8217;ll look back on this launch as the beginning of the end when Skynet becomes self-aware.</li>
<li>We now segue, awkwardly, to the topic of moderators. We&#8217;ve got 275+ moderators.  So now we&#8217;re discussing the process of removing a moderator, if it&#8217;s ever necessary.</li>
<li>We need to do it in a way to preserve the democracy and is similarly community-driven. <a href="http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/151606/handling-calls-to-remove-a-moderator" target="_blank">We asked on Meta</a> and got a lot of great feedback. The plan we came up with involved the other democratically-elected mods (and not the company) meeting and putting it to a vote.</li>
<li>The gang wonders how to remove a Supreme Court Justice. It&#8217;s semi-relevant.</li>
</ul>
<p>Tune in next week when we&#8217;ll have Scott Hanselman on (for real this time)!<br />
<iframe src="http://w.soundcloud.com/player/?url=http%3A%2F%2Fapi.soundcloud.com%2Ftracks%2F64405575%3Fsecret_token%3Ds-spStt&amp;show_artwork=true&amp;secret_url=true" frameborder="no" scrolling="no" width="100%" height="166"></iframe></p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2012/10/se-podcast-34/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>7</slash:comments>
			<enclosure url="http://www.podtrac.com/pts/redirect.mp3/feeds.soundcloud.com/stream/64405575-stack-exchange-stack-exchange-podcast-34.mp3" length="47313536" type="audio/mpeg" />
		<itunes:duration>0:49:17</itunes:duration>
		<itunes:subtitle>On the show this week are Kyle Brandt and Nick Craver, two SE employees who are heading up our systems upgrades and relocations &#8211; they&#8217;ll dish all kinds of details on our infrastructure, plus plenty of chat about other mildly relevant th[...]</itunes:subtitle>
		<itunes:summary>On the show this week are Kyle Brandt and Nick Craver, two SE employees who are heading up our systems upgrades and relocations &#8211; they&#8217;ll dish all kinds of details on our infrastructure, plus plenty of chat about other mildly relevant things.

First up on the agenda: Quantcast! Five minutes before we started recording, we noticed that Quantcast is ranking our network at #100! (or at least we were for a bit)
If all that additional traffic should cause our New York data center to go down, what will happen, Kyle? Great segue, Joel! We are working on a system for failing over to our datacenter in Corvallis, OR.
Our New York datacenter is also out of room for us, so we needed to have a failover system in place so the sites could stay up while we move all the equipment to the new datacenter.
Nick Craver runs at a hundred degrees, no problem. (Extensive conversation about temperature in datacenters ensues.)
Google opened up its datacenters via Street View, by the way. Cool.
Now back to more details about the failover. The word &#8220;splurt&#8221; is used. Eventually Joel lays out the whole process step by step. In the ideal situation, when our failover is planned ahead of time and not due to sudden meteor attack, the whole thing should take between five and fifteen minutes. Afterwards, we come up in read-only mode, at which point someone can manually switch us back into normal mode &#8211; or not!
Nick walks us through the sweet new equipment in the Corvallis datacenter. (How much would you pay for one of our original servers, hand-built and signed by @codinghorror?)
When we DO fail over to Oregon, the moderators come with us! And they love Stephen King movies! What a segue.
We&#8217;ve got a new Genealogy site, and it&#8217;s hard to spell, but the site is doing really well.  There are some very interesting questions on the Genealogy site, about many issues related to genealogy: how to use its software, how to find information, whether to distribute sensitive family information, etc.
Robotics is coming soon! We&#8217;ll look back on this launch as the beginning of the end when Skynet becomes self-aware.
We now segue, awkwardly, to the topic of moderators. We&#8217;ve got 275+ moderators.  So now we&#8217;re discussing the process of removing a moderator, if it&#8217;s ever necessary.
We need to do it in a way to preserve the democracy and is similarly community-driven. We asked on Meta and got a lot of great feedback. The plan we came up with involved the other democratically-elected mods (and not the company) meeting and putting it to a vote.
The gang wonders how to remove a Supreme Court Justice. It&#8217;s semi-relevant.

Tune in next week when we&#8217;ll have Scott Hanselman on (for real this time)!
</itunes:summary>
		<itunes:keywords>podcasts</itunes:keywords>
		<itunes:author>The Stack Exchange Team</itunes:author>
		<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
		<itunes:block>no</itunes:block>
	</item>
		<item>
		<title>Our newest team members: Diandra, Robert, Adam, Nicole and Casey!</title>
		<link>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2012/10/our-newest-team-members-diandra-robert-adam-nicole-and-casey/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2012/10/our-newest-team-members-diandra-robert-adam-nicole-and-casey/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 17 Oct 2012 17:24:24 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Bethany Marzewski</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[background]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.stackoverflow.com/?p=12342</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[In case you haven’t noticed, we’re growing pretty quickly over here at Stack Exchange. But just because they&#8217;re last doesn&#8217;t mean they&#8217;re least &#8211; so say hello to our newest hires! Diandra Partridge, Office Manager Denver Diandra steps in as the office manager for our new Denver hub. A graduate of Amherst College, Diandra is happy to [...]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In case you haven’t noticed, we’re growing <a href="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2012/08/stack-exchange-takes-on-denver-welcome-to-our-new-colleagues/">pretty</a> <a href="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2012/08/stack-exchange-now-60-valued-associates-strong/">quickly</a> over here at Stack Exchange. But just because they&#8217;re last doesn&#8217;t mean they&#8217;re <i>least</i> &#8211; so say hello to our newest hires!</p>
<p><br clear="both"><a href="http://stackexchange.com/users/1787301/sweetdee"><img class="alignleft" style="border: 1px solid black; margin-right:2em;" src="http://i.stack.imgur.com/YM6x0.jpg" /></a><strong>Diandra Partridge, Office Manager</strong></p>
<p><em>Denver</em></p>
<p>Diandra steps in as the office manager for our new Denver hub. A graduate of Amherst College, Diandra is happy to be back in her hometown as a member of the Stack Exchange team. Her current obsessions include (but are not limited to) Adventure Time, musical theater, and Tard the Grumpy Cat.</p>
<p><br clear="both"><img class="alignleft" style="border: 1px solid black; margin-right:2em;" src="http://i.stack.imgur.com/lehth.jpg" /><strong>Robert Brooks IV, Account Executive</strong></p>
<p><em>Denver</em></p>
<p>Robert is thrilled to join our Careers 2.0 sales team in Denver. Originally hailing from Cleveland, Robert attended Ohio University but now spends most of his time hiking, biking and skiing in the Rocky Mountains. He is also an avid concertgoer, craft beer lover and self-described Apple enthusiast.</p>
<p><br clear="both"><img class="alignleft" style="border: 1px solid black; margin-right:2em;" src="http://i.stack.imgur.com/RHktd.jpg" /><strong>Adam James DeLanoy</strong><strong>, Sales Representative</strong></p>
<p><em>New York</em></p>
<p>Born and raised in Westchester, Adam graduated from James Madison University with a B.S. in strategic communications. He currently lives on the Upper East Side of New York City, where he enjoys wearing “those toe shoes” and checking out the city’s best in the stand-up comedy scene.</p>
<p><br clear="both"><img class="alignleft" style="border: 1px solid black; margin-right:2em;" src="http://i.stack.imgur.com/zwSps.jpg" /><strong>Nicole Lebbad, Account Executive</strong></p>
<p><em>New York<strong></strong></em></p>
<p>A proud alum of Penn State University, Nicole is originally from New Jersey and now lives in Hoboken. When she’s not planning her wedding (to occur in Riviera Mya, Mexico), you’ll likely find her reading. Nicole is also a big Harry Potter fan—she owns at least least five copies of each book (from four countries) and has a tattoo of the Harry Potter lightning bolt.</p>
<p><br clear="both"><br />
<strong>Casey Ashenhurst, Office Administrator</strong></p>
<p><em>New York</em></p>
<p><img class="aligncenter" style="border: 1px solid black;" title="this picture was awesome, I couldn't bear to crop it any further, Jin" src="http://i.stack.imgur.com/dyvTl.jpg" /></p>
<p>A native midwesterner, Casey is psyched to join Stack Exchange as the new Office Administrator. After receiving her B.A. from Oberlin College in English and Media Studies, she promptly left the country to live in New Zealand for a year, and proceeded to travel throughout Southeast Asia. Since her return to the U.S., Casey has hung her hat in Brooklyn for the past three years. She is also an avid urban cyclist, DIY enthusiast, and cellist.</p>
<hr />
<p><i>Want to make these new hires your new colleagues? Join our team &#8211; <a href="http://stackexchange.com/about/hiring">we’re still hiring!</a></i></p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2012/10/our-newest-team-members-diandra-robert-adam-nicole-and-casey/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>12</slash:comments>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>SE Podcast #33 – It&#8217;s Back!</title>
		<link>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2012/10/se-podcast-33-its-back/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2012/10/se-podcast-33-its-back/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 15 Oct 2012 18:29:08 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alex Miller</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[podcasts]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.stackoverflow.com/?p=12388</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[It&#8217;s Back! Welcome to episode #33 of the Stack Exchange podcast.  We&#8217;ve got a brand new co-host (Jay Hanlon, our new VP of Community Growth) plus our guest this week is David Fullerton, VP of Engineering at Stack Exchange. So what&#8217;s new in the seven months since our last podcast? Check out the new and [...]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>It&#8217;s Back! Welcome to episode #33 of the Stack Exchange podcast.  We&#8217;ve got a brand new co-host (Jay Hanlon, our new VP of Community Growth) plus our guest this week is David Fullerton, VP of Engineering at Stack Exchange.</p>
<ul>
<li>So what&#8217;s new in the seven months since our last podcast? Check out the new and improved review queue! If you&#8217;ve got enough reputation, you can see the review button at the top of any Stack Exchange site. The new system is clearer to use and it&#8217;s fast thanks to a ton of AJAX goodness.</li>
<li>From the community side, one of the most important things about the review queue is the First Post queue &#8211; a list of the very first post from each brand new user.</li>
<li>You can also filter the queue, so you can tell it what kind of posts you want to look at &#8211; &#8220;only duplicates&#8221;, for example..</li>
<li>There&#8217;s a badge connected to using the review queue, so people are (naturally) gaming it. There&#8217;s an incentive to just go fast instead of thoughtfully helping to improve posts.</li>
<li>If we add a &#8220;reopen&#8221; queue, will we then have to add a &#8220;reclose&#8221; queue?</li>
<li>We&#8217;re looking at tweaking all of the language surrounding closing questions, including the word &#8220;closed&#8221; itself. &#8220;Not constructive&#8221; is itself not constructive feedback. How about &#8220;insufficiently objective&#8221;? &#8220;Poor thinking&#8221;? &#8220;You&#8217;re dumb&#8221;? &#8220;Subjective&#8221;? &#8211; but we have such a thing as <a href="http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2010/09/good-subjective-bad-subjective/" target="_blank">good subjective</a>. It&#8217;s not an easy thing to figure out.
<ul>
<li>(4:07PM &#8211; first mention of Taco the Siberian Husky.)</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>Closing questions is on the road to deleting them, but we still have hope for closed questions &#8211; or at least for the user who asked the bad question. Closures need to provide feedback to the users who asked the questions, so they have the opportunity to dispute or explain the situation.
<ul>
<li>(4:16PM &#8211; first mention of Yahoo! Answers.)</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>Got suggestions for how we re-word the close descriptions? <a href="http://meta.stackoverflow.com/" target="_blank">Post them on Meta</a>! The one thing that we need to be conveying is that Stack Exchange is a place for expert answers to factual questions, not shopping recommendations or discussion questions.</li>
<li>So what does Wikipedia do with content like this? Jason Punyon is here, apparently! He&#8217;s impressed with the way Wikipedia points out the problems they have with their articles with a big box right at the top. Wikipedia faces many of the same problems we do, with the faceless cabal of &#8220;moderators&#8221; deleting content at will.</li>
<li>Okay, let&#8217;s talk about something else.</li>
<li>Bigger picture: how do we teach new people how to use the site? We&#8217;re working on a new &#8220;About&#8221; page! (<a href="http://stackoverflow.com/about" target="_blank">Here&#8217;s the old one</a>.)</li>
<li>Example: tagging your first question! The current system tells new users they have to give their question at least one tag, but then it won&#8217;t let them create a new tag. They have to understand that there is a list of existing tags from which they must choose. (Or we&#8217;ll make the <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Random_forests" target="_blank">random forest</a> do it for us.)</li>
<li>So! What&#8217;s happened to the company in the last six months?</li>
<li>We opened a sales office in Denver! We&#8217;re expanding our office in London! We hired Jay! Put your profile up on <a href="http://careers.stackoverflow.com/" target="_blank">Careers 2.0</a>, because it&#8217;s exploding and that&#8217;s why we&#8217;re hiring salespeople for those two offices (and the NYC one) like crazy!</li>
<li><a href="http://stackexchange.com/about/hiring" target="_blank">We&#8217;re hiring a ton</a>. We&#8217;re hiring developers for <a href="http://careers.stackoverflow.com/jobs/16279/stack-overflow-careers-developer-new-york-stack-exchange" target="_blank">Careers in NYC</a> and for the Core Q&amp;A team in NYC <em>or</em> telecommuting <em>or</em> hanging out in our sales offices in Denver or London. (The offices and the sales people are very nice. Plus there&#8217;s free lunch.)</li>
<li>We&#8217;re hiring a <a href="http://careers.stackoverflow.com/jobs/24481/product-designer-stack-exchange" target="_blank">product designer</a>! And a <a href="http://careers.stackoverflow.com/jobs/23227/stack-exchange-product-manager-stack-exchange" target="_blank">product manager</a>! And a <a href="http://careers.stackoverflow.com/jobs/24001/senior-systems-administrator-stack-exchange" target="_blank">senior sysadmin</a>!</li>
<li>We&#8217;re getting a new office in New York City, by the way! If you&#8217;ve got enough rep, we&#8217;ll give you a lifetime membership to come hang out in our offices now and then.</li>
<li>So what else has happened? We&#8217;ve done some promotions. We&#8217;ve got a <a href="http://askpatents.com/" target="_blank">patents site</a>. We&#8217;ve got an <a href="http://apptivate.ms/" target="_blank">app development contest with Microsoft</a> going, so you can win prizes (including cash) for developing a Windows 8 app. Apptivate.MS. The MS stands for Microsoft or Malaysia or Multiple Sclerosis or Montserrat (it&#8217;s the last one) but Microsoft <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/.ms" target="_blank">uses it the most</a>. (Montserrat is really small and probably has a viceroy.)</li>
</ul>
<p>We&#8217;ll see you next week!<br />
<iframe src="http://w.soundcloud.com/player/?url=http%3A%2F%2Fapi.soundcloud.com%2Ftracks%2F63521866&amp;show_artwork=true" frameborder="no" scrolling="no" width="100%" height="166"></iframe></p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2012/10/se-podcast-33-its-back/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>12</slash:comments>
			<enclosure url="http://www.podtrac.com/pts/redirect.mp3/feeds.soundcloud.com/stream/63521866-stack-exchange-stack-exchange-podcast-33.mp3" length="50445531" type="audio/mpeg" />
		<itunes:duration>0:52:32</itunes:duration>
		<itunes:subtitle>It&#8217;s Back! Welcome to episode #33 of the Stack Exchange podcast.  We&#8217;ve got a brand new co-host (Jay Hanlon, our new VP of Community Growth) plus our guest this week is David Fullerton, VP of Engineering at Stack Exchange.

So what[...]</itunes:subtitle>
		<itunes:summary>It&#8217;s Back! Welcome to episode #33 of the Stack Exchange podcast.  We&#8217;ve got a brand new co-host (Jay Hanlon, our new VP of Community Growth) plus our guest this week is David Fullerton, VP of Engineering at Stack Exchange.

So what&#8217;s new in the seven months since our last podcast? Check out the new and improved review queue! If you&#8217;ve got enough reputation, you can see the review button at the top of any Stack Exchange site. The new system is clearer to use and it&#8217;s fast thanks to a ton of AJAX goodness.
From the community side, one of the most important things about the review queue is the First Post queue &#8211; a list of the very first post from each brand new user.
You can also filter the queue, so you can tell it what kind of posts you want to look at &#8211; &#8220;only duplicates&#8221;, for example..
There&#8217;s a badge connected to using the review queue, so people are (naturally) gaming it. There&#8217;s an incentive to just go fast instead of thoughtfully helping to improve posts.
If we add a &#8220;reopen&#8221; queue, will we then have to add a &#8220;reclose&#8221; queue?
We&#8217;re looking at tweaking all of the language surrounding closing questions, including the word &#8220;closed&#8221; itself. &#8220;Not constructive&#8221; is itself not constructive feedback. How about &#8220;insufficiently objective&#8221;? &#8220;Poor thinking&#8221;? &#8220;You&#8217;re dumb&#8221;? &#8220;Subjective&#8221;? &#8211; but we have such a thing as good subjective. It&#8217;s not an easy thing to figure out.

(4:07PM &#8211; first mention of Taco the Siberian Husky.)


Closing questions is on the road to deleting them, but we still have hope for closed questions &#8211; or at least for the user who asked the bad question. Closures need to provide feedback to the users who asked the questions, so they have the opportunity to dispute or explain the situation.

(4:16PM &#8211; first mention of Yahoo! Answers.)


Got suggestions for how we re-word the close descriptions? Post them on Meta! The one thing that we need to be conveying is that Stack Exchange is a place for expert answers to factual questions, not shopping recommendations or discussion questions.
So what does Wikipedia do with content like this? Jason Punyon is here, apparently! He&#8217;s impressed with the way Wikipedia points out the problems they have with their articles with a big box right at the top. Wikipedia faces many of the same problems we do, with the faceless cabal of &#8220;moderators&#8221; deleting content at will.
Okay, let&#8217;s talk about something else.
Bigger picture: how do we teach new people how to use the site? We&#8217;re working on a new &#8220;About&#8221; page! (Here&#8217;s the old one.)
Example: tagging your first question! The current system tells new users they have to give their question at least one tag, but then it won&#8217;t let them create a new tag. They have to understand that there is a list of existing tags from which they must choose. (Or we&#8217;ll make the random forest do it for us.)
So! What&#8217;s happened to the company in the last six months?
We opened a sales office in Denver! We&#8217;re expanding our office in London! We hired Jay! Put your profile up on Careers 2.0, because it&#8217;s exploding and that&#8217;s why we&#8217;re hiring salespeople for those two offices (and the NYC one) like crazy!
We&#8217;re hiring a ton. We&#8217;re hiring developers for Careers in NYC and for the Core Q&#38;A team in NYC or telecommuting or hanging out in our sales offices in Denver or London. (The offices and the sales people are very nice. Plus there&#8217;s free lunch.)
We&#8217;re hiring a product designer! And a product manager! And a senior sysadmin!
We&#8217;re getting a new office in New York City, by the way! If you&#8217;ve got enough rep, we&#8217;ll give you a lifetime membership to come hang out in our offices now and then.
So what else has happened? We&#8217;ve done some[...]</itunes:summary>
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		<itunes:author>The Stack Exchange Team</itunes:author>
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