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What processes made Stack Overflow the website it is today?

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I have been with the Stack Exchange community since it became popularized after its beta period. During that time I have seen it grow into the vibrant community it is now. I have also seen it evolve and change during that time, as a greater number of people have appeared on the site.

In a way, I suppose this was inevitable. As the site grows in popularity, it continues to attract new users who may not be familiar with the "gestalt" of the website, the qualities that make it special and unique. There are some who come along and insist that the website work "their way," insisting that their way is the "right way," without taking into account the history of the website, and the "friendly exchanges" that have shaped the software and the community into what it is today.

Do we do a good job of articulating this? I'm not so sure. I personally have been guilty in the past of defending marginal questions on the website, in the interest of good will and fairness. And then I have personally witnessed how the website can be overrun with ill-conceived questions, and the dialog dominated by people who don't understand why the site is the way it is, and who hijack the discourse with their own point of view.

I have also seen long-standing users grow weary of trying to defend what they legitimately believe is a community culture of professionalism that is a product of the many hours that people have put in trying to figure out what works and what doesn't.

So for those of us who came here after the beta was over, after the big decisions had already been made, can you describe why the site has the qualities it does have today, and what the process was like that led to some of the policy decisions that make the website the high-quality knowlegde exchange that it is today?

I realize that a lot of this ground is already covered in the blog, but honestly blogs are not necessarily the best medium IMO for this kind of thing (the material is scattered among several blog entries, and it is difficult to find). If the material we gather here is of sufficiently high quality, perhaps we can eventually make it a FAQ entry.

Thanks for listening, and for participating in the Stack Exchange community.


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