vote up 13 vote down star
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As I see it, the only effect of having 3 sites instead of one is that questions in Serverfault and Superuser are seen less and answered less.

This just causes audience fragmentation and dissipation for no reason.

In addition it causes useless friction and waste regarding the endless issue, where does this question belong to? Belongs-there, belongs-here...

The site comes with a powerful tag filtering feature anyway.

Those 3 sites have very similar audiences, questions, and expertise fields.

Take for example:

  • Where is the limit between writing macros and programming (superuser/stackoverflow)?
  • Configuring rewrite rules for apache, is programming or administration (superuser/serverfault)?
  • Advanced registry configuration is administration or power-user tasks (superuser/serverfault)?
  • Writing bash scripts is programming or server administration (stackoverflow/serverfault)?

Feel free to add your examples in the comments...

I think the answer is that most questions fit in at least two sites and what matters is not the issue itself but what was the bigger issue the asker was trying to solve.

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per your examples: macros are programming, the context of that depends on the question being asked though; rewrite rules for apache is admin; registry config is admin; bash scripts is admin. ;-) – Steven A. Lowe Jul 13 at 15:22

8 Answers

vote up 14 vote down

Update: made policy on the blog

http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2009/07/why-cant-you-have-just-one-site/

This just causes audience fragmentation and dissipation for no reason.

But if you are discussing everything, you are discussing nothing.

There is no (good) community that can form around "let's just talk about everything and tag it".

It's also same reason neighborhoods tend to form in communities -- chinatown, little italy, garment district, wall street, etcetera.

I think the answer is that most questions fit in at least two sites

Examples? Most questions do in fact fit pretty reasonably into these ..

  • programming (so)
  • servers (sf)
  • general computer hardware or software (su)
  • discussion about the discussion (mso: you are here)

.. buckets.

Considering your examples:

  • Writing macros?
  • Configuring rewrite rules for apache?
  • Advanced registry configuration?
  • Writing bash scripts?

I'd first ask "what is your job title?" and then "which community do you consider yourself a part of?" followed by "what are you trying to accomplish?"

You can use the same mountain to go downhill really fast on snow -- but it's usually plainly evident to the participant which culture they consider themselves a part of, "skiers" or "snowboarders". There's not a whole lot of confusion within the community itself.

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+1 For the snowboard example. – Diago Jul 13 at 13:04
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Jeff, take for example Wikipedia. Wikipedia is about everything, although each article is about something very specific. And some may say there is noise, because of undeserving entries about, let's say, Britney Spears. Which may be true, but Britney Spears does not appear in the entry about Chinese Pottery. The questions you think I should ask myself when posting are not so relevant, what matters is the question, not the asker, I think. – flybywire Jul 13 at 13:11
we're a hybrid system and thus can never go too far in any one direction -- there's a push and pull from the opposing forces depicted here stackoverflow.com/Content/Img/… – Jeff Atwood Jul 13 at 13:47
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-1 for asking for examples then referring to the examples already provided in the question. – antony.trupe Jul 26 at 15:14
vote up 6 vote down

Less noise.

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vote up 6 vote down

I think that most people would not bother to tag their questions accordingly ([SO], [SE], [SU]). This would result in much noise, as Jonathan points out. Some questions might be valid on 2 sites, and in this case we should be rather forgiving to prevent shuffling.

I do think that the answering style will be different as well. If I as a programmer ask about a macro problem, the people on SO will tend to assume that I have some basic programming knowledge and give a higher level answer that does not teach the absolute basics or go further into the stuff as would fit for a professional programmer.

Asking on SU, I would probably get a totally other style of answer, starting at a much lower level.

This will route the people to the right site over time.

I first thought about shared questions between the sites (maybe through a shared database), but the argument I just stated speaks against that.

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vote up 4 vote down

I can see why they're separate - there is more power in a focused community, and it's more attractive to the search engines.

But I also tend to agree that there is a lot of potential overlap in the sites.

Perhaps an option to see consolidated question and answer lists might be an answer?

Ultimately, user experience is what counts. If users get frustrated switching from site to site again and again (I'm already suffering a bit of this when checking MSO as well as SO) then eventually someone else with another SO clone will step in and fill the need.

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vote up 2 vote down

I think the idea of the three sites is a good one, but what we need to be addressing is the interface (yuk) between the sites.

Questions like yours and this one address the issue and even suggest possible solutions. Even if the exact solutions mentioned here aren't implemented they will have some effect on those that actually are and eventually there will be cleaner interface between the sites.

One suggestion could be that when someone asks a question the similar question search is performed on all sites and the site that returns the most answers is the one that should get the question. Or check the tags from all the sites and direct the question at the site that contributes the most tags.

So pose your question and then suggest a possible solution or two and you never know one of them might get implemented.

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well, there is already an integrated search between all sites: Google. – Jeff Atwood Jul 13 at 12:08
site:stackoverflow.com php – Jonathan Sampson Jul 13 at 12:15
Point taken on the search. I was thinking about using the site's own search box (I know shock horror!) – ChrisF Jul 13 at 12:21
vote up 1 vote down

This just causes audience fragmentation and dissipation for no reason.

It's not for no reason. It's for the same reason as why I'm interested in learning what's new in .NET 4.0 and yet I don't know why your printer doesn't print.

I like to have only programming related tags, users and reputation in StackOverflow. It helps keeping things more consistent.

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vote up 0 vote down

Jeff is bending the rule already... meta.stackoverflow and stackoverflow. why not servers.stackoverflow then? less Google-OpenID friction at least.

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actually, we have stackoverflowoverflow.com – Kyle Cronin Jul 27 at 0:17
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For consuming information and answering questions, it certainly would be nice to have better integration, but as Jon Skeet says on the blog, SO has a certain magic broad-but-not-too-broadness about it. You wouldn't just want to log in and view all the questions in the universe. Since StackExchange will probably result in lots of good communities that people might be interested in, I think the following idea is a good dream. You have a central identity, like an email address, which is used for any knowledge-exchange community, and you can subscribe to any number of such communities (e.g. SO/SF/SU/MSO/CookingExchange). Within each community, you can have your interested/ignore tags and so on. When you sign into your account, you can see all the questions in all your communities (maybe this should have to be tweaked; you'd probably want all your SO/SF/SU questions together, but CookingExchange questions separately).

Of course, reputation in separate communities would have to be kept separate. Also, you'd have to deal with the problem that people need to post to the appropriate community, so this solution doesn't really solve the problem posed in the question. Come to think of it, this dream is basically what we've got now! Keep up the great work, Jeff et al.

I think the current setup is very good, but I do wonder what's going to happen when StackExchange happens. It would be nice if there were some way to migrate accounts and questions between different knowledge-exchanges.

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