Here's a fewCondensed from my original post (some old, some new, some borrowed, some bluesee edit history):
- Doc Overflow - Rhymes with site name, meaningful, a bit corny.
- Stack Docs - Simple and concise, but lacking panache or market appeal.
- Knowledge Base - Well-known and accurate, if boring.
- Knowledge Overflow - Meaningful but corny, incorporates "overflow".
- Stack Articles - Documentation, tutorials, examples, etc. are all types of articles, though this could be too generic and possibly misleading.
- Stack Overflow's (Incomplete) Guide to Everything - I'm a big _why fan
- Stack Library - Has name of company and name of research institution. Concise. I like the use of "library".
- Articles on Stack Overflow - Again with "articles". Somewhat fitting.
- Article Overflow - Slightly more market-speaky alternative to above.
- The Orange Book - In the vein of "Red Book" for OpenGL; maybe evocative of too authoritative/sealed of a reference?
- Syntax Error - Keeps in the vein of programming terms as site names, and refers to a common problem often addressed by more in-depth tutorials or documentation.
- Stack Tuts - It's short, and talks about "tutorials"; might be too specific to tutorials and not enough to examples or documentation.
- Unlucky suggestion #13 - I've ridden Tower of Terror, I know 13 is bad
- Reference Heap - Somewhat descriptive, play on "heap reference", maybe too playful/verbose
Syntax Error
In the vein of Stack Overflow being a programming problem (the name an example of the types of things the site hopes to address) and Server Fault being a configuration or hardware problem (also a good example), I feel that Syntax Error is a good way to summarize a problem which occurs from incomplete understanding of the technology or tools used.