Because for the life of me I can't and it's really bugging me.
Maybe one of you found it the same way I did and can remind me...
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Because for the life of me I can't and it's really bugging me. Maybe one of you found it the same way I did and can remind me... | |||||
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I was an avid reader of Jeff's blog. He first started talking about it, and the rest was history. (I actually found Jeff's blog through Stumbleupon.) | |||||||||||||||||
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Joel's blog. | |||||||||
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I believe it was GirlDeveloper's blog (aka Sara Chipps) that first put me onto it, although I didn't join until it came out of private beta. Thanks to that blog post I'd heard of it, and Douglas Leeder (a close friend) probably mentioned it too. I started writing a blog post about the possibility of getting addicted to SO on the evening of the day I joined (September 26th 2008) although the actual post didn't go out until the Sunday evening. | |||||||||||||||||
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I believe I found it by searching a question on Google. A StackOverflow question was the first result. I pretty much just joined to get rid of that annoying "First time here? Check out the FAQ" thing that kept popping up. I never believed I would get more 100 rep, let alone 7,000. | |||||
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Rich B made me. Seriously. | |||||||
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Haackoverflow from PDC. | |||
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I follow both Jeff and Joel on their blogs, so I started listening to the podcast from episode 1. | ||||
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I think it was through some arbitrary blog post saying "Stack Overflow out of private beta" or something along those lines. I had never heard of it before, so I decided to check it out. It did not disappoint. | |||
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I saw if first on Jon's blog. At the time (like Jon) I was a usenet frequenter, and I remember thinking 2 things:
I didn't join for another week or so, when I finally decided to give it a whirl. I was hopelessly hooked soon after. I kept trying to convince myself that Jon's lead was just that fortnight's headstart... but that excuse simply isn't cutting it any more ;-p | ||||
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I can't remember, I joined a while ago. I can remember be a big fan of it almost right away though. The clear interface, and the quality and speed of the answers impressed me! When your used to asking on a forum then coming back a day later to someone who has a equal misunderstanding of the issue then SO was light years ahead. This was my first question: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/272007/getting-id-of-embedded-asp-object-using-javascript-and-jquery Look at the quality of the answers. | |||||||||
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I somehow managed to find Coding Horror, at about the same time that Jeff and Joel started talking about Stack Overflow. I honestly don't remember how I found out about Coding Horror. | |||
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A link to Joel's blog from use.perl.org. It was kind of like "Get over there before and support Perl!" So here I am. The perl expert category wasn't quite as glutted as it is now. | ||||
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I think I first saw it in a Google Tech Talk. | ||||
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Jon Galloway asked me to see if I could create mischief (nicely, reporting how) after some beta testers had already been naughty hackers. | ||||
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I first heard mention of SO on one of Doug's blog posts at The MathWorks. | ||||
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Wow, I've been here for 6 months already!? Well, according to my account, Jan. 13 was the day of my first question. Correlating that to my Google History, on Jan 13 I was looking up a friend by his screenname. It rendered a stackoverflow account - I viewed it, and two other search results. Signed up thereafter. How's that for MacGyver? | ||||
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I was introduced to Stack Overflow by a colleague. (Who is also the chief architect in our R&D team, and my direct superior.) | ||||
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I think StackOverflow gradually entered my consciousness. It would come up fairly often when Googling programming questions, and I think one day, it just sort of hit me that there was something special about SO. It was probably the aesthetics I noticed first--the site has a really clean, inviting look, and code blocks are formatted just how you'd like them to be. So, I bookmarked it and started going there first when I needed help. Soon after that, I started to notice the reputation score and badges. I had seen reputation ratings on other sites, but it seemed to stand out more on SO. I could see the power of it. It's like a competition to see who can be the most cooperative. It was then that I joined. | ||||
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I Googled some Java question or another and an SO post was the most useful result. That single experience wasn't enough to hook me, but the top Google result for the very next question I had was also an SO post. So I took a closer look, signed up, started answering questions.... | ||||
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I don't remember the exact timeline, but Scott Hanselman mentioned it either on Hanselminutes or in his blog. This would have been approximately when Preview 5 was out, and I had just started an MVC project so was mainly interested from that perspective. ("Hey, here's a really cool site that is built in ASP.NET MVC!") | ||||
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I saw it mentioned on comp.lang.c , someone linked to an answer on SO to ask if it was 'best practice'. I'm pretty sure it was someone getting help working through the K&R exercises, if memory serves. My first thought was:
Naturally, I realized that participating in SO was the best way to exact revenge for every time I hit a pay wall in search of a good answer. There weren't many people answering questions on Linux / POSIX / Linux-kernel, and not nearly as many people answering in the C tag, so I found my home there and have been there ever since :) | ||||
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