In this episode of the Stack Overflow podcast, Joel and Jeff discuss the meaning of “professionalism” online, the divide between ad-subsidized and pay business models, and the five things everyone should hate about their favorite programming language.
- A brief mini post-mortem of DevDays. What makes a good conference? What makes a worthwhile event for software developers?
- Speaking of conferences, Joel and I will both be at the Business of Software conference next week in San Francisco.
- A discussion of Robert Scoble’s article on the chat room / forum problem. Some of this stuff is counter-intuitive: you don’t actually want to be too welcoming to newbies, and you don’t actually want too much pure discussion. As Robert said, “the more conversations I got involved in the less I found I was learning.”
- I object a little bit to people proposing social design patterns to me that are historically demonstrated not to work — or, worse, are known to be toxic. Essentially, they offer opinions without any research or even knowledge of prior research in the field.
- We examine Joel’s latest Inc article, Does Slow Growth Equal Slow Death?. 37 Signals responded in their blog.
- Joel and I both tried to explain our careers strategy. I think Joel’s post on careers.stackoverflow.com was clearer than my post on careers.stackoverflow.com, in that I had to post an update to mine because I failed to explain it adequately — at least based on the reader comments.
- To the extent that careers is focusing people on “how can I be more professional online?” we heartily encourage this side-effect. Why wouldn’t you behave professionally online all the time, anyway? It is possible to have fun while being professional at the same time.
- We posted the results of our Amazon advertising experiment. It looks like software developers are a worst-case scenario for some types of advertising. Unfortunately.
- You can use free to undermine your competitors, but Google is going them one better — they are paying companies to use their products. It’s “less than free”. Google’s strategy is to get as many people online as possible, since more people online equals more ad clicks, statistically speaking.
- There’s an interesting tension between the “charge for stuff” (Microsoft) and “give people ad-subsidized stuff for free” (Google) models. Having been on both sides of this now, there are definite pros and cons to both.
- Joel and I concur: it probably doesn’t matter what language and toolchain you use, as long as it has a certain level of critical mass. What you should be more concerned about is the product you’re creating.
- If you’re happy with your current tool chain, then there’s no reason you need to switch. However, if you can’t list five things you hate about your favorite programming language, then I argue you don’t know it well enough yet to judge. It’s good to be aware of the alternatives, and have a healthy critical eye for whatever it is you’re using.
- Most programming languages don’t evolve particularly well over time. They’re usually replaced by other languages rather than new iterations of themselves. Why? What languages would you point to as the best example of growing and evolving in useful, relevant ways?
We answered the following listener questions on this podcast:
- Edward: “What fun technologies are coming up that you think employers are willing to spend money on?”
- Colin: “If I’m happy with PHP, why would I want to convert to ASP.NET?”
If you’d like to submit a question to be answered in our next episode, record an audio file (90 seconds or less) and mail it to podcast@stackoverflow.com. You can record a question using nothing but a telephone and a web browser. We also have a dedicated phone number you can call to leave audio questions at 646-826-3879.
The transcript wiki for this episode is available for public editing.
Do you remember when I discussed the crushing disappointment that is Google AdSense in Podcast 64? If Stack Overflow, a site that does a million pageviews a day, can’t make enough from AdSense to pay even one person half time — and let me tell you, that’s being overly generous based on the actual income it generated — how does anyone make a decent living with AdSense? Seriously, how? Exclusively talking about Mesothomelia and Asbestos, or what?
As a result, we dropped AdSense like a hot (or, rather, a particularly cold) potato. Instead, we turned to our pal Alex of The Daily WTF, and hooked into his curated ad network for software developers. We are firm believers in responsible (read: no flash, no animation) and restrained (read: limited to 3 ad slots, reduced ads for >200 rep) advertising. This has worked quite well for us so far. How well? On the order of fifty to a hundred times better than AdSense! I am not exaggerating. Those are actual numbers.
Even though Alex does a great job, we always have a lot of left over unsold ad space. And as the site has grown over the last 6 months, this gap has widened. So then the question becomes — if AdSense doesn’t work for us (and boy, does it ever not work for us) — then what can you do with that remnant ad space? I hate the word monetization with a passion, but surely something useful could be done here?
That’s when Portman Wills approached us. He’s not only an old school 4 digit Stack Overflow user and fellow programmer — he also has extensive experience in his previous gigs with advertising code.
Portman is currently busy building cool stuff like shuffletime (not to mention his hilarious parody sites woofer and feeling unlucky). But he was enthused about the opportunity to help out Stack Overflow — and maybe, just maybe, generate some ads that were actually (gasp!) useful and relevant to his fellow programmers at the same time.
Thus, Portman generously offered to build a custom ad-serving site for us, which we gladly hosted at rads.stackoverflow.com.
Rads has three main components:
- A spider which uses the Amazon Product Advertising API to crawl the Amazon product catalog.
- A website which renders an advertisement based on Stack Overflow tags.
- Some analytics to determine which ads, books, and tags are most effective.
The spider was fed the top 5000 tags on Stack Overflow. For each tag, it preformed a keyword search on the “Computers & Internet” node, returning the top 10 books with five-star reviews, sorted by number of reviews.
You can read the full skinny in Portman’s summary. We had high hopes of building something that connected great programmers with quality programming books on Amazon. The ads looked nice, too:
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Excellent plan, right? Smart. Clever, even!
Well, it was a complete and utter failure.
Despite our purported cleverness, it didn’t work. Not even a little. The Amazon ad experiment was a total failure by any metric I can think of. Clicks, revenue, goodwill, newton-pounds, cuils, you name it. It was literally a waste of everyone’s time. Even flipping burgers would have paid more.
But this failure was not for lack of trying. If a guy as skilled as Portman — who not only has a deep background in custom advertising, but is also a programmer capable of writing a solution tailored to our specific audience — can’t make this work, I had to regretfully conclude that nobody could make it work. It’s just not possible.
So we scrapped the whole thing, and we’re going in a different direction. More news on that soon.
But in the meantime, since we had our fancy-shmancy Amazon Affiliates account set up, we might as well put it to good use. Even way back in the original Stack Overflow beta, people were proposing that we convert any Amazon book links to Stack Overflow amazon affiliate book links. I was hesitant to do this at the time, but given our failure, I was licking my wounds. I was willing to give it a try. Particularly since the community seemed totally OK with the concept.
So, onward to plan B: we now auto-insert Stack Overflow affiliate info into any amazon book links posted on Stack Overflow. Oh yeah, and here’s the kicker. These silly little rewritten text links work 200%-300% better than our custom amazon book ads!
Go figure.
All I can say is, advertising is hard, let’s go shopping! And when it’s not hard, it’s borderline scammy, which is something we just don’t do at Stack Overflow.
At any rate, I’m glad Portman is here to take the blamehelp. Apparently we can add advertising to the long, long list of things that we suck at. But we do plan to suck less every year!
The latest version of the Stack Overflow Trilogy Creative Commons Data Dump is now available. This reflects all public data in …
- Stack Overflow
- Server Fault
- Super User
… up to November 2009.
Download the Stack Overflow Trilogy Creative Commons Data Dump via BitTorrent
Please note that the Stack Overflow trilogy data dumps are now hosted at LegalTorrents! You can subscribe via RSS and be notified every time a new dump is available.
Have fun remixing and reusing; all we ask is for proper attribution.
Joel and Jeff sit down with Jon Skeet, software engineer at Google London, and the first Stack Overflow user to achieve 100,000 reputation.
- A brief audio snippet of Jon’s presentation at London DevDays, featuring Tony the Pony and his sidekick.
- A discussion of the Google London offices, which aren’t quite up to Joel’s high standards, but are quite fun in their own right. And, they do offer free unlimited Curly Wurlies! The London office mostly does mobile development, which in Google world is Android.
- Joel explains his analogy of software development as a biology-based process, instead of a physics-based process.
- In Coders at Work, Peter Norvig — chief research guy at Google — explains that his definition of correctness in software now mostly involves statistics intervals, not absolute boolean “this is right”, “this is wrong” tests.
- A brief discussion of Joel’s painful 14 line AppleScript odyssey.
- There is a wall — literally — of hundreds of mobile phones at Google London that they use to test against. We wonder how Google’s Android will avoid devolving into the same miasma of dozens or hundreds of different versions of hardware, all of which behave differently and require special software support or workarounds.
- Is Apple becoming to mobile apps what Microsoft was, and is, to desktop PC apps? Will success in future mobile devices require an iPhone emulation layer? Although Apple unquestionably deserves their success with the iPhone, Joel and I are deeply concerned that too much Apple dominance in this area is bad for developers, as Apple serves developers poorly.
- Jon spends a lot of time dealing with date and time issues, and shares one particularly horrifying timezone example. Apparently, time is often ambiguous and subject to change by human processes that aren’t … entirely rational.
- It is OK to have “fun” questions on Stack Overflow, but a) only occasionally, as we can’t have the system overrun by pure entertainment and b) the question must be legitimately programming relatd and accepted by the community. As with so many things in life, moderation is key.
- If you’re Jon Skeet, you can post your schedule on meta and it will get 40+ upvotes. Mind you, there is no technical answer there, it’s just Jon’s schedule.
- The daily reputation cap is partly there to encourage programmers to take a break. The goal isn’t to be on Stack Overflow, but to generally do things that make you a better programmer. While that certainly includes the fractional time slices of questions and answers that programmers so generously contribute, it also means doing your job, and writing code! To the extent that Stack Overflow itself becomes the goal, we are failing you.
Our listener question this week is from … Jon Skeet!
- Why is the reputation cap (currently 200 points per day) time based? Would other forms of capping reputation work better or be more preferable?
Our favorite Stack Overflow question this week is:
- What is the best Battleship AI? A good example of a fun, but appropriate, question for Stack Overflow.
If you’d like to submit a question to be answered in our next episode, record an audio file (90 seconds or less) and mail it to podcast@stackoverflow.com. You can record a question using nothing but a telephone and a web browser. We also have a
dedicated phone number you can call to leave audio questions at 646-826-3879.
The transcript wiki for this episode is available for public editing.
We unveiled a milestone in Stack Overflow Careers at DevDays London earlier today.
We had originally envisioned careers as a completely private subscription service, but we belatedly realized that was kind of a mistake, and the source of much confusion. One common bit of feedback we got from users was the cognitive dissonance between Stack Overflow, which is free and public by default, and Stack Overflow Careers, which was private and subscription only by default. We agree. That’s why we’ve now added a free, public side to careers.stackoverflow.com:
| Publish CV | free, public CVs for any working programmer who wants one, at the URL of their choice. |
| File CV | subscribe for a nominal fee, and make your private CV visible to and searchable by hiring managers |
Public CVs can be made visible, with full privacy controls, at the custom URL of your choice. Like so:

You can view a sample public CV at http://careers.stackoverflow.com/community to get an idea of what public CVs look like. Of course you can associate and link your Trilogy accounts to your public CV as well.
Obviously, each URL has to be unique, so they are provided on a first-come, first-served basis. If you want a specific http://careers.stackoverflow.com/foo type URL for your public CV, sign up with Careers now and reserve your desired URL on the Publish CV tab.
But Public CVs isn’t all. This careers update also has:
- re-ordering of experience and education entries to taste
- support for full Markdown formatting in all free text CV fields
- automatic blocking of any of your previous employers from finding you in searches (by company name)
- optional free, public CVs with the URL of your choice, with detailed privacy control
- lots of other little
bug fixeslittle new improvements!
Creating and publishing your CV are, and will always be, completely free. But filing to make your CV visible and searchable by hiring managers will still involve a nominal fee. The introductory filing rate of $29 for 3 years runs until November 9th. If you think you’ll ever be looking for a job in the next three years, I encourage you to take advantage of this faaaaaaaabulous introductory rate. After November 9th, it will go away!
We’re serious about creating connections between smart developers and companies who appreciate smart developers. If you have any questions or feedback, let us know on meta.stackoverflow.com in the careers tag. We’re always listening. Our #1 goal is to actively improve careers in every way we can over the next few months.





