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Active reading [<https://stackoverflow.design/brand/copywriting/naming/>].
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Peter Mortensen
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This is deeply disappointing. StackOverflowStack Overflow was hands-down one of the best litmus tests I had for employers. When I was contacted by a recruiter, or I decided to reach out to them, I would send along my SO Developer Story. If they countered with "we also need a resume" then I knew they didn't pay enough attention to "where developers spend time, get questions answered, and build community." That was enough to tell me they wouldn't value me as a developer in the ways I needed, and I moved on.

Losing this basic litmus is painful. I'm sure glad the new owners have decided that their bottom line and "inability to differentiate themselves in some ill-defined marketing category" is more important than the value the actual community has found in the tools we've been given.

My honest hope is that someone builds an opt-in SO Dev Story alternative. Poll the APIs, build out the stats, and recompile the most relevant points, plus-or-minus some functionality to customize. Seems like a great opportunity, one I wish I had spare cycles for.

This is deeply disappointing. StackOverflow was hands-down one of the best litmus tests I had for employers. When I was contacted by a recruiter, or I decided to reach out to them, I would send along my SO Developer Story. If they countered with "we also need a resume" then I knew they didn't pay enough attention to "where developers spend time, get questions answered, and build community." That was enough to tell me they wouldn't value me as a developer in the ways I needed, and I moved on.

Losing this basic litmus is painful. I'm sure glad the new owners have decided that their bottom line and "inability to differentiate themselves in some ill-defined marketing category" is more important than the value the actual community has found in the tools we've been given.

My honest hope is that someone builds an opt-in SO Dev Story alternative. Poll the APIs, build out the stats, and recompile the most relevant points, plus-or-minus some functionality to customize. Seems like a great opportunity, one I wish I had spare cycles for.

This is deeply disappointing. Stack Overflow was hands-down one of the best litmus tests I had for employers. When I was contacted by a recruiter, or I decided to reach out to them, I would send along my SO Developer Story. If they countered with "we also need a resume" then I knew they didn't pay enough attention to "where developers spend time, get questions answered, and build community." That was enough to tell me they wouldn't value me as a developer in the ways I needed, and I moved on.

Losing this basic litmus is painful. I'm sure glad the new owners have decided that their bottom line and "inability to differentiate themselves in some ill-defined marketing category" is more important than the value the actual community has found in the tools we've been given.

My honest hope is that someone builds an opt-in SO Dev Story alternative. Poll the APIs, build out the stats, and recompile the most relevant points, plus-or-minus some functionality to customize. Seems like a great opportunity, one I wish I had spare cycles for.

Rollback to Revision 2
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g.d.d.c
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  • 15
  • 10

This is deeply disappointing. Stack OverflowStackOverflow was hands-down one of the best litmus tests I had for employers. When I was contacted by a recruiter, or I decided to reach out to them, I would send along my SO Developer Story. If they countered with "we also need a resume" then I knew they didn't pay enough attention to "where developers spend time, get questions answered, and build community." That was enough to tell me they wouldn't value me as a developer in the ways I needed, and I moved on.

Losing this basic litmus is painful. I'm sure glad the new owners have decided that their bottom line and "inability to differentiate themselves in some ill-defined marketing category" is more important than the value the actual community has found in the tools we've been given.

My honest hope is that someone builds an opt-in SO Dev Story alternative. Poll the APIs, build out the stats, and recompile the most relevant points, plus-or-minus some functionality to customize. It seemsSeems like a great opportunity, one I wish I had spare cycles for.

This is deeply disappointing. Stack Overflow was hands-down one of the best litmus tests I had for employers. When I was contacted by a recruiter, or I decided to reach out to them, I would send along my SO Developer Story. If they countered with "we also need a resume" then I knew they didn't pay enough attention to "where developers spend time, get questions answered, and build community." That was enough to tell me they wouldn't value me as a developer in the ways I needed, and I moved on.

Losing this basic litmus is painful. I'm sure glad the new owners have decided that their bottom line and "inability to differentiate themselves in some ill-defined marketing category" is more important than the value the actual community has found in the tools we've been given.

My honest hope is that someone builds an opt-in SO Dev Story alternative. Poll the APIs, build out the stats, and recompile the most relevant points, plus-or-minus some functionality to customize. It seems like a great opportunity, one I wish I had spare cycles for.

This is deeply disappointing. StackOverflow was hands-down one of the best litmus tests I had for employers. When I was contacted by a recruiter, or I decided to reach out to them, I would send along my SO Developer Story. If they countered with "we also need a resume" then I knew they didn't pay enough attention to "where developers spend time, get questions answered, and build community." That was enough to tell me they wouldn't value me as a developer in the ways I needed, and I moved on.

Losing this basic litmus is painful. I'm sure glad the new owners have decided that their bottom line and "inability to differentiate themselves in some ill-defined marketing category" is more important than the value the actual community has found in the tools we've been given.

My honest hope is that someone builds an opt-in SO Dev Story alternative. Poll the APIs, build out the stats, and recompile the most relevant points, plus-or-minus some functionality to customize. Seems like a great opportunity, one I wish I had spare cycles for.

Active reading [<http://stackoverflow.com/legal/trademark-guidance> (the last section)].
Source Link
Peter Mortensen
  • 31.6k
  • 4
  • 22
  • 14

This is deeply disappointing. StackOverflowStack Overflow was hands-down one of the best litmus tests I had for employers. When I was contacted by a recruiter, or I decided to reach out to them, I would send along my SO Developer Story. If they countered with "we also need a resume" then I knew they didn't pay enough attention to "where developers spend time, get questions answered, and build community." That was enough to tell me they wouldn't value me as a developer in the ways I needed, and I moved on.

Losing this basic litmus is painful. I'm sure glad the new owners have decided that their bottom line and "inability to differentiate themselves in some ill-defined marketing category" is more important than the value the actual community has found in the tools we've been given.

My honest hope is that someone builds an opt-in SO Dev Story alternative. Poll the APIs, build out the stats, and recompile the most relevant points, plus-or-minus some functionality to customize. SeemsIt seems like a great opportunity, one I wish I had spare cycles for.

This is deeply disappointing. StackOverflow was hands-down one of the best litmus tests I had for employers. When I was contacted by a recruiter, or I decided to reach out to them, I would send along my SO Developer Story. If they countered with "we also need a resume" then I knew they didn't pay enough attention to "where developers spend time, get questions answered, and build community." That was enough to tell me they wouldn't value me as a developer in the ways I needed, and I moved on.

Losing this basic litmus is painful. I'm sure glad the new owners have decided that their bottom line and "inability to differentiate themselves in some ill-defined marketing category" is more important than the value the actual community has found in the tools we've been given.

My honest hope is that someone builds an opt-in SO Dev Story alternative. Poll the APIs, build out the stats, and recompile the most relevant points, plus-or-minus some functionality to customize. Seems like a great opportunity, one I wish I had spare cycles for.

This is deeply disappointing. Stack Overflow was hands-down one of the best litmus tests I had for employers. When I was contacted by a recruiter, or I decided to reach out to them, I would send along my SO Developer Story. If they countered with "we also need a resume" then I knew they didn't pay enough attention to "where developers spend time, get questions answered, and build community." That was enough to tell me they wouldn't value me as a developer in the ways I needed, and I moved on.

Losing this basic litmus is painful. I'm sure glad the new owners have decided that their bottom line and "inability to differentiate themselves in some ill-defined marketing category" is more important than the value the actual community has found in the tools we've been given.

My honest hope is that someone builds an opt-in SO Dev Story alternative. Poll the APIs, build out the stats, and recompile the most relevant points, plus-or-minus some functionality to customize. It seems like a great opportunity, one I wish I had spare cycles for.

edited body
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g.d.d.c
  • 47.9k
  • 15
  • 10
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Source Link
g.d.d.c
  • 47.9k
  • 15
  • 10
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