244

Update

A follow-up to this post has been made here: "The Goal of Teams: Our Follow-Up to Your Questions"


TL;DR:

We're proposing a new area called Teams. The goal is to allow groups (of varying sizes) to publicly share about themselves (who they are and what they build) on Stack Overflow. Content can include information about The Team (Overview, Meta Information), a member roster, projects, community interaction (Questions), and recruitment (Jobs, Get Involved). Team affiliations will be reflected in your user profile.


This past spring, the product team held a multi-week brainstorming session where we thought about how we could build on Stack Overflow's current success of improving the lives of developers. What other valuable information does the programming community need, but is trapped elsewhere online and offline?

Documentation is one of those ideas. Teams is another, and that’s what we’re excited to share with you today.

Huh? Teams?

First let me state what Teams are and why we’re excited about them:

Teams are a new way to share your knowledge with the world. This includes what you build, who you build it with, answers to questions about how you build it, and how others can get involved. These groups can vary in size from a few people working on a small open-source project to companies and sub-teams within those companies.

Here’s why we’re excited about teams:

  1. Teams allow for a new kind of Q&A that wouldn’t be allowed right now
  2. Teams let you show off more of what you do professionally
  3. Teams help you hire developers or recruit for your open source project

Teams Mockup

How does adding Teams to Stack Overflow solve this?

It introduces a new kind of Q&A.

Teams addresses a need the community wanted solved from the beginning, but didn’t fit in our original Q&A. Documentation is our attempt to help the community address questions which would typically be considered too broad. Teams is our attempt to address items which typically are considered too localized.

What do we mean by "too localized"? Well, let’s start off with what we don’t mean. Questions such as "please fix my codes" will still not be allowed. Instead, we’re looking to provide a place for questions such as:

  • "How does [Company X] run PostgreSQL at an enterprise scale?",
  • "What's a typical budget for [Company Y] when they upgrade their data centers?", or
  • "How does [Company Z] keep their distributed team working together even though they’re spread across multiple time zones?"

These are interesting questions which don’t have room in the community right now. These questions allow us to start sharing how various teams have arrived at solutions others can learn from.

It lets you show off more of what you do professionally.

XKCD: No I in Team

Your user profile lets you show off your own achievements: what you have done on Stack Overflow, who you are, how you’re involved. Teams are an extension of your profile by letting you now share about your team, what you’re building, who’s working on it with you, how you’re solving problems, and how people can get involved.

It helps you hire and recruit other developers.

After salary, two of the top job search considerations for developers are team culture and what they’re building. But, despite that, job listings are typically dry and boring lists of requirements, responsibilities, and expectations. A short team blurb might be included, but it may not even represent the development team fully. Teams can cut through that by giving developers a fuller picture of the team, created by the team.

Inversely, if you’re looking for a job, now you have one place you can go to learn about a team, their culture, what they’re building, and who’s involved. Maybe this information is the motivation you needed to apply or maybe it helps you feel more secure in your possible decision to join the team. Or, maybe it’s the info you need to realize just how miserable you’d be working with that team. Either way, Teams can help you make more informed decisions.

We Need Your Help

This is the first step, sharing where we’re at. We’ve been thinking about what Teams on Stack Overflow look like, what they can offer, and how they might behave; but now we need your feedback. We’re still in the early stages, but we believe involving the community is vital to strong, successful ideas.

The second step will be a private beta, where the community will use this in ways that we never dreamed of or intended test things out and identify where we need to work harder. The private testing timeline is the obligatory six-to-eight weeks. A sign-up form will be at the end, so please keep reading.

The Proposal (On How Teams Will Work…Initially)

We've got a lot of crazy ideas for these pages, and probably won't have a clue which makes sense until you give us some feedback, but here’s what we think the first version will look like:

Teams are open-ended…for now. Meaning we aren't prescribing how they should be used. We reserve the right to change this, but we're interested in seeing what people create teams for and how they organize them.

Teams are self-forming. We aren’t going to create them. That’s up to you. They can be of any size…even 1 person.

Anyone can sign up and join a team. We’ve considered having a required rep level to create a team, but want anyone to get involved with a team if they want to. So for now, we’re starting without a requirement. If chaos ensues, then we’ll revisit this area...

Teams are formed around groups of people and the projects they work on. Most likely this will mean companies (i.e. Stack Overflow, HBO, etc.), sub-teams within companies (i.e. the Trello mobile team, the Microsoft Excel team, etc.), organizations (i.e. Mozilla, W3C, etc.), or open-source projects (i.e. KVM, ASP.NET MVC, etc.).

Teams can share how they work and what they’ve learned. What’s your tech stack? What’s the purpose of your team? What projects do you work on that you’re excited about? How can people join your team?

Joining a team is public. We are not doing private teams. The goal here is to share information, not hide it behind some secret curtain. When you join a team, you’re added to the team’s roster. Eventually we will also add a list of teams you’re a member of onto your profile, but it won’t be in the beta.

People can only ask questions about the team on the team page. Wait, does this mean Stack Overflow is a social network? Emphatically no. You cannot directly message a particular team member or start random discussion questions. When a new question is created, the team will be notified through their inbox that a new question has come in. If teams receive too many questions, we will explore rolled up notifications or other ideas. Once notified, anyone on the team can answer the question. If the team feels it’s a question that should be on Stack Overflow, they can move that question out into the general questions area.

Questions list proposal

As far as mechanics are concerned, right now we are thinking that the only things that will be different with team questions are that you will not be able to earn reputation (from asking or answering questions) or offer bounties. Up and downvoting questions/answers, comments, flagging, deleting, and admin functionality will all still apply.

Team questions will be kept on team pages…for now. For the time being, we don’t want to clutter the community with questions most people can’t answer.

This is all great and all, but do you have anything else planned for Teams? Well, yes. Yes, we do. It’s still early and everything is subject to change as we move along and hear to your feedback. But we have considered other ideas as well. They are:

  • Projects. A place where teams can share about projects and the challenges they face(d) while working on them.
  • Team Artifacts. Blog articles, conference talks, podcast episodes. All the various things that feature your team but that’s strewn across the worldwide interwebs.
  • Team Opportunities. Have an opening on your team? Want developers to know how to get involved with your open-source project? We’ll provide an area where teams can list job opportunities or sign-up instructions.
  • Following Teams. Stay up-to-date when teams answer a new question, update or post a new project, post a new job, or anything else that updates their page.
  • Team Rep & Badge Totals. Show off your team’s brilliance within an aggregated reputation and badge area.
  • Top Questions & Answers. What are the top questions and answers for the team?
  • Team Timeline. View a team’s activity within one default view. What questions has the team answered? What questions and answers have team members written within the community? New team members. New projects and project updates. New job opportunities. All of this within one view that you can easily scan and catch up on a team’s activity.

FAQs

  • Can you earn reputation answering team questions?
    • No. Much like answering questions on Meta, answering team questions is also a reputation-less activity. Badges could potentially be earned however. More details on this will follow.
  • Will you be able to vote on questions and answers?
    • For now we will allow normal upvoting and downvoting, but mainly because we want to see how voting differs here versus community questions. If we identify areas which could be tweaked, we will address those then...
  • What if someone asks a coding question on a team page?
    • There will be an easy way to move it into regular Q&A.
  • Will I be able to send a private message to a team member?
    • Nope. We still have no intention of becoming a social network.
  • Who can join a team page?
    • Initially people will be able to join team pages through one of two options:
      • A unique URL link which would grant you access into the team.
      • You will be able to set an email address domain, allowing anyone who has a valid email address to join your team.
    • Looking ahead we also foresee other ways people can join teams:
      • Being invited by other team members.
      • When adding roles, schools, or projects onto your profile, you will be asked if you would like to join the team at that time.
      • When linking a GitHub or open source project to your profile, you’ll be asked to create or join a team page at that time.
  • Who can create a team?
    • Initially anyone can create a team page. You will be able to create a team from the Teams “Overview” page. Eventually you will also be able to create a team from your user profile page when you add a job role, school, or project.
  • Who can edit the team’s summary information?
    • Any team member can edit a team’s overview, meta information, team members, and projects. We will maintain a historical record of these changes so they can be rolled back in the event something was changed that shouldn’t have been changed.

Beta Registration

If you would like to help us test this out, please sign up at the form link below. We will need to know the following things about you:

  1. Your Stack Overflow profile URL
  2. Your email address
  3. Your team name
  4. Your team size (team size especially helps us because we will want to see how teams of varying sizes will utilize the team page).

Sign-up for the private beta

109
  • 42
    Users can be part of multiple teams, right? Like, a company and an Open Source project?
    – Pekka
    Commented Oct 6, 2015 at 20:10
  • 277
    You managed to write at least three quarters of this post with breathless "this is revolutionary, this will change Q&A forever" language before actually saying what teams are. I'm still not entirely clear what they are. It almost sounds like you just want a new SE site where each tag wiki represents a team rather than a concept. Why does this require an entirely new application?
    – davidism
    Commented Oct 6, 2015 at 20:10
  • 177
    Are you going to try to authenticate teams? How are you going to prevent a bunch of people from creating "Jon Skeet's team" or "MSDN"?
    – ryanyuyu
    Commented Oct 6, 2015 at 20:11
  • 158
    what did I just read?
    – user1228
    Commented Oct 6, 2015 at 20:32
  • 47
    It's a meta post, @Will.
    – Adam Lear StaffMod
    Commented Oct 6, 2015 at 20:34
  • 35
    Team Rep & Badge Totals - Will they still be useless Internet points when they can impact not just a person's but an organization's real world reputation? What happens when people on the same team start up voting each other's posts? Is it not a problem as long as it's not serial voting?
    – BSMP
    Commented Oct 6, 2015 at 20:34
  • 81
    What's the motivation for creating a team? Why would my company/group want a team? We've already got official websites/blogs, Github/BitBucket issue trackers and wikis, Slack chat, Trello planning, etc.
    – davidism
    Commented Oct 6, 2015 at 20:40
  • 147
    I'm a little skeptical. Are you going to have somebody reach out to every person who creates a team to vet them? What keeps me from starting a Microsoft Works team? Can other people join the team? Can they create teams with the same name? Will there be a race for people to register names like "Google"? If Google comes along and wants to start a team, are they going to be able to "steal" the name from whoever has it?
    – user229044 Mod
    Commented Oct 6, 2015 at 20:44
  • 296
    So... what problem was this solving again?
    – Travis J
    Commented Oct 6, 2015 at 21:02
  • 77
    I was on the fence about Documentation, but this proposal makes the Documentation proposal look absolutely amazing in comparison. I have my doubts that teams will scale well to the entire StackExchange network (although I could be wrong) and I fear that they will either be a) misused b) abused or c) neglected. Perhaps I'm too skeptical or I lack the vision that the SO team has, but upon reading this proposal, I'm asking myself: "What am I really going to DO with this feature?" I don't think it offers that much.
    – user677526
    Commented Oct 7, 2015 at 3:57
  • 63
    Can someone please make a TLDR for this?
    – user3373470
    Commented Oct 7, 2015 at 15:20
  • 76
    I'll admit that this idea strikes me completely wrong. Documentation still fits in with what I feel the culture of SO to be, that of creating information to make the internet a better place. We're already drowning in social sites and places where we can "connect" with others. SO, and SE in general, are one of the few user-driven communities on the internet that's about something concrete: an archive of information and a place to get help. Add this to Careers, where it belongs, not to SO.
    – Linuxios
    Commented Oct 7, 2015 at 16:59
  • 102
    This feature does not advance the mission statement of Stack Exchange. Please remember why we're here: "...to build a library of detailed answers to every question about programming." Doing things just because we can is actively detrimental to that goal, and will worsen Stack Exchange's long-term success. Either explicitly change the mission statement, or - preferably - please don't do this.
    – user1131435
    Commented Oct 8, 2015 at 0:04
  • 87
    I'm voting to close this feature as off-topic because it's not about programming, it's a social network.
    – Boann
    Commented Oct 8, 2015 at 14:39
  • 29
    Something tells me that this is going to be implemented regardless what anyone says here. "They" are excited about it.
    – zxq9
    Commented Oct 9, 2015 at 2:57

42 Answers 42

1
2
9

Should I add this thing to stackoverflow.com? This thing being teams.

Does it help people ask questions? No.

Does it help people find answers when their question is already asked? No.

Does it help answerers find questions they can answer? No.

Does it help answerers answer the question correctly? No.

Does it help peers to determine the validity of an answer? No.

I don't ask questions on Facebook, and I don't intend to have a friends list on Stack Overflow. Teams add nothing to our ability to ask, answer, and review questions, and questions and answers add nothing to teams. If you want teams, and you can think of some way you can do it better than Facebook and Google do it already, better than teams do it themselves already, start a brand new intellectual property for it.

4
  • 1
    What is "IP" in this context? Intellectual property? Domain name? Commented Oct 18, 2015 at 10:36
  • @petermortensen yes, fixed.
    – sqykly
    Commented Oct 18, 2015 at 18:05
  • 1
    I'd argue that teams do add something with regard to reviewing questions etc, but it's not good. Teams are a great way to pool together votes, the currency that drives most of the actions here. When you pool them together, you can have a team that has a strong, erroneous opinion about question X and wield their friends list to close it or completely obliterate it (delete), provided there is high enough rep users in the group. This happens frequently with chat. People share links to things they don't like, and people blindly follow and destroy it.
    – user562566
    Commented Oct 18, 2015 at 23:08
  • @technikempire good point. The system for distributing ethos and gravitas on stackoverflow is great as is, no need to complicate it.
    – sqykly
    Commented Oct 19, 2015 at 2:18
8

How will this expansion impact Stack Overflow's current SEO?

Currently, Stack Overflow results dominate Google search results for programming problems. One of the reasons why localized questions aren't allowed on the site is because they aren't useful to a general audience. Otherwise, search results would be cluttered with solutions that could really only help the person who originally asked the question, and no one else. "Finish writing the rest of my code to solve my particular problem" questions are a classic example.

I'm concerned about how allowing localized questions in Team sections of the site will affect SO's overall search rankings. Suppose I'm trying to figure out general techniques for optimizing my queries in SQL Server. I search Google, and the top result ends up being a non-technical answer about how Team XYZ on Stack Overflow optimized their database queries by outsourcing to consultants, because it was more cost effective for them? That probably won't be of much help to me...and that's just one example of how SEO could be negatively affected.

This expansion reminds me so much of questions that I'll sometimes find on Quora (and perhaps Reddit too). I never see Quora dominating search results, but maybe I'm just not searching for things where Quora dominates.

2
  • 4
    In your scenario, maybe one result is how a team outsourced their problem, but you could also have a number of other answers how various teams optimized their SQL Server for specific circumstances—which line up potentially with some of your circumstances. The short answer to your initial question is we don't know, but if that becomes an issue then we'll address it when the problem is more fully formed.
    – Hynes StaffMod
    Commented Oct 7, 2015 at 12:29
  • I do see Quora pollute the top of my search engines searches every now and then, sadly.
    – Nemo
    Commented Oct 9, 2015 at 16:48
8

TL;DR: As a question-poster, post-with-tags is more useful than post-to-team-page.

Best explained with an example:

I'm facing an issue - OS-X specific, using Python 3.4, anaconda and a third library (both with github pages). Right now, I start a post-with-tags under stackoverflow.com (tagging python, OS-X, anaconda etc).

This would then attract answers from people who have worked with similar library groups, and people who have developed individual libraries, as they would presumably be following those tags or have them recommended due to their interaction history.

Assuming that in 3 months, each library has a team page, this convention changes... I can post-with-tags, post-on-team-page or post-with-tags-on-each-team-page... essentially being forced into classifications where none is needed.

A far more useful alternative to Teams would be to allow each person/ID to optionally have additional expert-level tags (like Twitter's Verified ID) next to their user-name.

1
  • 2
    To put it another way.... (i) a posting under Teams implies that it is most relevant, when it might not be. (ii) if posted under a wrong team / if (unrelated) teams are required to cooperate to solve compatibility/interaction issues, classifying something under one team is disadvantageous.
    – Fox
    Commented Oct 14, 2015 at 9:14
7

Never change a winning concept!

While I liked the idea for a second, the BIG problem quickly dawned upon me: SO/SE isn’t a team-site… just like it isn’t a forum (even when truckloads of newcomers a day tend to “think different” and cause havoc by posting comments as answers, and all that fun stuff).

Now, don’t get me wrong on this – I sure love collaboration and I‘ve spend my fair share contributing to loads of open-source projects as a dev so I know what team means – but from my experience, when people start to team up, it doesn’t take long until one team tries to get (let’s just call it) stronger than any other team. Therefore, I think things have a big chance going south quickly. When people have a chance to group up, it simply introduces a new dynamic… and the reality of the internet is that such a dynamic isn’t really positive (or healthy) in each and every way.

Providing only one of many examples: it is to be expected that a single person answering a question correctly might be overrun and most probably downvoted by a group of (as they’ll call themselves)…

“experts”

… just because the team wants to remain the “best at” or wants to be displayed as “we know it all, forget the rest”. Surely this won’t happen in each and every situation, but the potential scenarios exist.

Closely related with this comes another thing: “peer pressure”, which can result in a team member going against her better judgment to escape the wrath of other members. The result at SO/SE would be a bad answer quality… which would be bad for the related SE site, and the SE network as a whole.

While I’m pretty sure the SO/SE core team is aware of such issues (after all, those are the areas where gamification can and – according to Murphy’s law – will go wrong if not handled correctly), and while I’m pretty sure the SO/SE core team already has some ideas to stop potential “unite and conquer” strategies by yet-to-be-implemented teams, I can’t say I’m having an easy feeling when thinking about the potential badness that might get introduced with such a feature. May be me, but this is one of those rare times where my gut feeling prevents me from saying “hey, that’s a great idea”. Honestly, I currently think it’s not.

Yet, I’m open to be proven wrong. In fact, I hope I’m wrong… because I just love the SE network.

6

What if someone asks a coding question on a team page?
There will be an easy way to move it into regular Q&A.

I'm more concerned about how it will work the other way around. Right now there are tons of questions that are off topic on main Q&A site but would fit individual team's Q&As like you said.

Do we let team members "steal" questions from main site? Do we get a voting system like for closing questions? Can all people participate in that voting or only team members?

What happens to any rep gained or lost on those Q&As, or more importantly what about down-votes which might often happen on off topic questions that would never get down-voted on team pages?

5
  • We have no plans for regular Q&A being converted to team questions. As for the "who can vote" on closing/deleting, we haven't really talked about that since the default assumption is "everyone" and we haven't seen any reason that'd change. We haven't gotten heavy into close reasons, but the list would be different, because of what's on/off-topic for example.
    – Nick Craver Mod
    Commented Oct 7, 2015 at 10:20
  • @NickCraver I meant in case it was possible to migrate from regular Q&A, who would have the power to do so? You should really reconsider that since I don't think it's a less complicated problem that getting new users to post in proper place. It would be much more useful to have migration from regular to team Q&As and just delete/close off topic questions on team sites than the other way around (much more useful for teams that is). Commented Oct 7, 2015 at 11:39
  • This way you are giving teams burden of moderating off topic questions and moving them to regular site, but aren't giving them a chance to answer questions posted to regular site because they would just be closed as off topic. Commented Oct 7, 2015 at 11:41
  • @FilipRadelic I defer to Nick here, but if we were to consider something like this I would imagine that team members would not be able "grab" questions out of the community area to answer on their page. Team members are mods for their page—not the community.
    – Hynes StaffMod
    Commented Oct 7, 2015 at 12:37
  • If it team related questions beginning flooding the community area, maybe a migration path could be built used by mods to move them over. The problem is that 1) a team page might not always exist, 2) a mod might not which team to address this to (which becomes a bigger issue if it goes to the wrong team), and 3) there might already be a similar question there.
    – Hynes StaffMod
    Commented Oct 7, 2015 at 12:37
6

Would there be a risk of company profiling?

If you have developers openly linked to companies/projects it makes it possible to analyse the questions they are asking and speculating on their future intentions. I could see this being an issue across many companies, large companies (media speculation) and start-ups (IP protection during early development).

Also, if you are publicly associated with a company then every answer you provide is potentially a reflection on the company, this could be difficult for developers and management to balance.

It sounds like it could be 'too transparent' in practice.

6

This isn't adding a cool new feature, it's an attempt to replace the cornerstone of SO, the individual.

What has driven this site is individuals asking questions and individuals sharing their knowledge. This is the focus, it's because you have so many individuals posting individual content that you have all of the content that you do. Now you want to put the focus on groups.

Let's remember that groups can be blamed as one of the pillars of division and conflict in the world. When I'm in group A and you're in group B, it's you VS me, no matter how politically correct and heavily policed that environment is. In Canada right now (where I'm from) we're voting day minus 1, and a great way to start world war 3 is for me to simply step outside and publicly declare what group I support. Sure, this isn't the exactly the same, but a group is what a group is, a line in the sand drawn between you and me.

As it stands, we're all of one group. We're individuals all contributing our knowledge independently and together, for the (usually) harmless competition of collecting rep. However, a great many fights (moderators and experienced users will know this) have come along over even silly internet points or just pride. I submit that people are far more motivated and willing to go to battle or do evil in the name of their clan than for fake internet points (see all of human history for references).

I've already said this but I'll say it clearly: this discards the individual, which is what we're all about, and you know it, hence the language to attempt to make them appear included.

Teams are self-forming. We aren’t going to create them. That’s up to you. They can be of any size…even 1 person.

I am a jack of all trades, I can do most of the work of a complete team, but that still doesn't make a team. One person isn't a team just because you put "Team" next to their name. You're trying to be inclusive but (not trying to be rude) it's nonsense, team/individual are polar opposites and one of these is going to become a second class citizen.

Finally, even if you omit everything I've already said, the example questions you give are off topic and I think it would be a minority who would really care about the answers and surrounding discussion. I come here when I'm in cargo cult mode and can't understand why something unexpected is happening in something new, to find detailed, educating discussion about code so I can learn about code. I don't care how X Billion Dollar Corp Inc. scales Y software across N servers and what the budget is, because that has little do with code and more about systems administration.

Further, seeing that I don't sit at the helm of a billion dollar business looking to scale up my infrastructure to serve my 70 million customers, I simply don't care. Did I mention this website is about code?

3

Be warned:

You will reduce Stack Overflow to a few cliques of self-proclaimed experts talking to each other.

The questions from students on Stack Overflow will be ignored by these cliques or simply not seen as they focus on trying to impress each other within the cliques. Stack Overflow's greatest value, viz., solving simple problems quickly, will be greatly diminished.

Moreover, I bet that most of your users started with Stack Overflow during their neophyte days and used it most heavily during that period. If you diminish and exclude them, you are diminishing your future role.

I could be wrong about this, but I could be right. Seems like a very bad business move

....and yes, I agree with other responses here, that you are followimng the herd on social media trends.

2
  • "I bet that most of your users started with Stack Overflow during their neophyte days" I was going to berate you for suggesting that "most" users would either be young enough or stupid enough to have built their career on SO usage, but I realised I scarily have no data to back that up, and there are a lot of young SO users. Like, a lot. If you started programming within the last five years or so I suppose there's a chance you're one of them. But let's not forget that the real experts who create the technology you use in the world learnt their trade long before Stack Overflow came about. Commented Oct 19, 2015 at 1:20
  • acknowledged....and heaven forbid that SO is used in place of solid training. But most neophytes nowadays rapidly learn to rely on SO for fixing IndexOutOfBoundsExceptions, transaction problems etc. etc.
    – Jake
    Commented Oct 19, 2015 at 2:16
2

How will migrated questions be handled? Will the migrater be the owner, or the original asker, or the team, or something else? Any of those could have a negative effect.

Original asker

They asks a valid question for a team, and someone (wrongly) decides to move it to Stack Overflow where actually, it's off-topic. Then, though no fault of the asker, they get downvoted, flagged, etc.

Migrater, Team, Community, and Other

The question is a good valid Stack Overflow fit, well received, get's good answers, and a lot of attention on up-votes. This way the original poster misses out on the reputation points, badge progress, etc. that comes with asking a good question.

The only thing I can think is there is some sort of approval queue for questions being migrated, or they default to Community, and the asker gets a notification saying "Your questions has been migrated, do {{this thing}} to claim it". That way if the question was badly migrated, the user can ignore it, but if it is a good one, they can get the rewards that come with asking a good question.

-5

More and more I realize that it takes great effort and a bit of luck to get one idea across. People has different interests, and they tend to "translate" information toward their own interests. Back in June 2015, I was trying to find a chance to present one idea to facilitate collaboration in a conference, but I did not manage. Now I am on adrenaline to see @Hynes present the idea here. Let's see what we can do together.

I call it the MBL (music band like) collaboration model. The motivation is very much the same if you don't want to call it identical. I was focusing more on bioinformatics, but aiming at a more general solution. It is to solve a software project, biology project, or any other projects that need expertise that you can't find around you, or you do not satisfy with the current situation. I thought about advertising the idea to Stack Overflow and establish my first "band".

I registered some domains and intended to find partners to develop the idea further. However, there have been other things with higher priority to finish. And now, I see it is an excellent time to talk about it. I do not intend to hijack the topic, but I want to show I share the same vision. I will be delighted to talk and find the collaboration if someone is interested. I post some slides below, if you are interested in the whole presentation; contact me via email.

To comment on the Opening Post, as you may already know by now, I am with it. However, I truly believe in terms of "branding", Stack Overflow needs to have a sister brand for this kind of service, i.e. another sub of Stack Exchange.

Title

Five Pillars

MBL Moble

BiSSt

Update:

In reply to some comments, I would like to clarify what I am trying to say. I was thinking about making a website to offer a platform for people with various professional background to assemble a team with expertise that he/she is looking for. This platform is to address the need to create a collaboration that is driven by professional background, project's needs/goals, and openly discussed benefits for everyone involved. I use the metaphor of a music band (slide #3 top down) to describe the way this team is assembled or disassembled.

As far as I can see, the new service being proposed here by Hynes has much similarity to the platform I am incubating. For example, both allow team formation from site's members, QnA among team members. However, I aim at an dedicated website and not limited to programming projects. A separate website, even though it may share user database and login session, offers various other benefits, such as:

  1. working on various types of projects, including non-coding projects.
  2. private discussion for project's sensitive information an
  3. unambiguous identity for branding and SEO and room for adding other
  4. functionality as online collaboration tools.

If StackOverflow staffs and anyone else are interested, I will be glad to join force and build the website.

Hope this make things clearer, and sorry for any confusion.

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    I have absolutely no idea what you're talking about. Commented Oct 19, 2015 at 1:21
  • Maybe you should make clearer what you're trying to say here; what is your goal with this? Where do you see a connecting point between your idea and Teams, and how is it relevant to SO?
    – Pekka
    Commented Oct 19, 2015 at 8:59
  • Heck is this gibberish?
    – Boann
    Commented Oct 19, 2015 at 10:57
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    LightnessRacesinOrbit , @Pekka웃 and Boann, I added an update at the end of the post. Please be patient while I am trying to improve my writing skill :-) Commented Oct 19, 2015 at 11:09
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    Your idea is interesting, but I'm not sure whether it's going to be compatible with this Teams thing - it seems to go beyond what they are proposing, and they're getting loads of flak for introducing social networking elements as it is... For a right-out job application, you should probably write to the team directly
    – Pekka
    Commented Oct 19, 2015 at 15:26
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There are teams on the SE sites already. Inofficially. Most of the SE sites are controlled by an inbreed team calling itself "community".

The proposed "expansion" of the SO won't be an expension, it will make them only fair and legal. Essentially, you would only legalize the voting circles.

Instead of it, maybe you should work on some other areas:

  • Making the new profil page ready, integrating it to the other parts of the system (here I am thinking on especially to the consistent support of the hidden accounts)
  • Restart of the suspended area52 project (the update & expansion of area51)
  • Constructing some organisational and technological idea to better support on the multilingual (i.e. non-English) sites
  • Helping the different SE sites better integrated, for example easier question migration or even shared content between the different SE sites.

On my opinion, you should go into these directions and not into the current one.

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-24

I was very excited.

Then I saw the part where you wouldn't allow private teams.

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    Care to expand on this a bit? Do you have a particular concern with the disallowing of private teams? Or it is just your personal preference that teams be private? If you expand on your idea here, the team can more easily address it.
    – Kendra
    Commented Oct 6, 2015 at 20:39
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    Just to be clear, "private teams" seems to just mean you can't form teams that are hidden from public view. It doesn't mean that individuals can't form a team. If you are looking for an internal team communication tool there are vastly better options out there than SO could ever offer you.
    – Pekka
    Commented Oct 6, 2015 at 20:40
  • That is to make sure SO's infrasystem does not get abused as a private code sharing base. There are existing services to do just that.
    – Jongware
    Commented Oct 6, 2015 at 21:18
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    @Jongware it's not that - it's that private teams doesn't go towards our goals of expanding knowledge. If the artifacts aren't public, what good are they to the world at large?
    – Nick Craver Mod
    Commented Oct 6, 2015 at 22:37
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