For reference:
My Developer Story: https://stackoverflow.com/story/thomasjowens
My Developer CV: https://stackoverflow.com/cv/thomasjowens
When selecting the network sites to display, it lists meta sites. With the exception of Meta Stack Exchange, I'm not sure why anyone would want to explicitly advertise their Meta presence. This is especially true since reputation-wise, it's tied to the main parent site. Having these other sites makes it harder to scroll through the list. At least by default, Meta sites (except for Meta Stack Exchange) should be hidden to make it easier to navigate and browse.
The display of the site name only appears on hover of the site's icon. That's not obvious or clear - it should be on hover anywhere in the box with the icon and reputation. It would be better if the site name was just displayed so it was even more obvious to readers who (1) don't know the SE site logos and (2) don't think to hover over them.
The displays of sites and reputations should also be links to the person's profile on those sites, to give readers easy access to their profile and then to their questions and answers on a given site.
On my CV, I used to have my Top n% tags hidden, but it doesn't look like you can hide them anymore, either on the Developer Story or the CV. Yes, those are my top tags on Stack Overflow, but they don't properly represent the bulk of my knowledge or interest, since they are only SO. I'm in the Top 10% of the agile tag on SO and Top 5% for architecture, design, and database-design, again on SO. But this is a Developer Story and my contributions on other development-related sites in development-related tags are just as important. Just looking at Programmers, I'm the third all-time user in agile and scrum, the top all-time user in uml, the 12th user in project-management, the second user in requirements...and so on.
There are other professional or software development related sites I participate on - Project Management, Open Source, The Workplace come to mind. Other people participate on Computer Science, Code Review, Programming Puzzles and Code Golf, Law, the list goes on. Users can add top answers from any site in the network, but the Top n% tags appear to only be pulled from Stack Overflow. This feature should be either (1) more inclusive or (2) able to be turned off so it doesn't give readers a false impression.
Some of the ordering doesn't make much sense.
It looks like the timeline is supposed to be reverse chronology. However, looking at my timeline in the story view, my IEEE Certified Software Development Associate appears above (meaning after) my position as Senior Software Engineer at UTC Aerospace Systems. A Coursera course that I added appears before my Senior Software Engineer at UTC Aerospace Systems role, but I completed it in 2013, 2 years after I started that position.
I think that positions should appear where you started them. It looks like it appears closer to where it ends. Although I'd be open to the ability to toggle or reorder, since some people may want the positions to appear where they end.
You still can't add text descriptions to certifications.
The Recommended reading section looks bland. It looks like the books should have their covers next to the title, but for me, none of them do. The columns is better than the single list in the CV view. I think that either the book covers should be displayed, or that image removed to display more titles, since many books listed there have their titles cut off for me.
You can still only link to one website, your Twitter, and Github accounts. No room for BitBucket, LinkedIn (although it may be a competitor, it does offer networking and communication that SO Jobs doesn't), email address, Facebook profile, Quora account, Google+, etc. There's just a lot of things that you can't put there that you should be able to.
It doesn't apply to me (at the moment, or probably in the near future), but it looks like you can receive job matches unless you put at least 2 technologies that you want to work with. I'm not sure how these fit into job matching, but I'm technology agnostic, so I've left that section empty on the CV. For someone like me who is technology agnostic and doesn't care what they want to work with, listing everything that they can possibly work with would be verbose, to say the least. This should be an optional field, even when using Jobs to find a new job. The technology tags on past positions and education should be sufficient.