As we all know, stackoverflow is great. I think the concept could work in a bunch of different areas. Will there be an easy way for people to create a QA site that runs on the stackoverflow engine? In particular, I'd like to see a site for tech support. It would be nice if people could post computer related questions that don't have to do with programming. For example, they could ask the classic pc vs. mac question, or ask for help diagnosing their network issues.

I'm sure this has been thought of before, but does anyone know what's going on with it?

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3 Answers

Yes, and you can spread it yourself with Stack Exchange for an easy monthly payment starting at $129/month!!!

BUT, there is also Server Fault and the soon to be launched Super User (both run by the Stack Overflow team), the later of which very well may address your ideas.

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ONLY $129 MONTH?!?! WHAT A DEAL!! – Jeff Atwood Jul 2 '09 at 6:31
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I've been wishing for the Stack Overflow model to be adapted to a gaming website. That way we can ask questions about video games via this new model rather then by certain other methods.

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IMHO I think the spread will be limited. Joel's Google Tech Talk on the subject is somewhat insightful on the subject. They spent a lot of time thinking about what kind of site to design and I think it works really well for programmers.

But you can drop that same concept into a different community and it'll just not work. His opinion was that general topics--too broad and where people weren't doing it for a living--didn't work. Yahoo Answers is a prime example of this.

I think the concept has had far more limited success (to date) as serverfault. I'll be interesting to see how Superuser does.

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I think that has to do with Server Fault addressing a much more narrow audience. The first warning sign was when I couldn't identify any famous IT / sysadmin bloggers, even after repeatedly asking for others to point them out.. – Jeff Atwood Jul 2 '09 at 6:29
I think there's a couple of reason's for SF's size. First, people like network and database admins won't identify with the sysadmin tag (some will, some won't); how will you bring them in? Second, a lot of people who are sysadmins will have job titles like Tech Support or IT Support. Expect to shepherd a number of them to SF once SU goes live. – pgs Jul 2 '09 at 6:58
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And I think administrators just plain don't like their jobs as much as us coders, and so don't talk about it, read about it, get involved with community, etc. They go to training courses and then they find something else to do after ten years--management, sales, or become a hot dog vendor. – Stu Thompson Jul 2 '09 at 7:17
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