I started my career in a job where I'd have roughly 11 hours of meetings jammed into an 8 hour day. This type of environment made getting work done difficult. Of course there were deadlines that were impossible (unless, of course, someone with a bigger stick comes along and rearranges your priorities each morning). When I started my career, there was no Stack Overflow. If I had questions, I had the random web forum, listservs, or if I was lucky, the older person in the next cube who was hanging on until retirement (thank you experienced coworker!).

Looking at my [reputation chart](http://stackexchange.com/users/63984/andy?tab=reputation), it seems I joined in late 2009 and then took over 18 months to get 100 rep. I think that's a great testament to how helpful Stack Overflow is. I didn't have to ask every question I had, because someone else had done so and received an answer that was useful. I escaped my job of meetings to another position - to a technology I'd never used. I spent countless hours browsing Stack Overflow (and official documentation and tutorials) learning this new technology. Without Stack Overflow, I would not have had the practical [examples](http://meta.stackoverflow.com/a/303868/189134) (a very conveniently timed answer, if I do say so myself) that I needed. 

Over the years, I've gone from lurking to answering questions. I've found that providing answers was rewarding, because it gives me a short break from "real work" and allows me to learn new things. There has been countless occasions where I've read a question and thought "That should be possible...but I have no idea how to do that" and then spend a bit figuring out a solution. I learn something, someone else learns something and if I'm lucky I get to use that new knowledge later.

Stack Overflow has helped my pick up new technologies, provided a way to expand my knowledge and given me a way to share some of my experience with others.