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I am giving a keynote at Devscovery tomorrow at 9am. The title is "Social Networking for Developers." It's 90 minutes long and I don't want to waste anyone's time.

Everyone I talk to who uses Twitter, Blogs, StackOverflow, etc, says that these sites make them "better developers." However, few are able to qualify HOW and fewer are able to quantify HOW MUCH better.

Is it just about getting answers to questions? Is it about the developer's third place?

Help me, O Stack Overflow, O great social network of developers, with my Keynote on Social Networking. ;)

What makes developers, usually an anti-social bunch, strive to use the internet for social purposes?

How do Social Networking sites help you better do your job?

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I wonder why 2 people have voted to close this. That's mean. – Scott Hanselman Apr 14 at 0:54
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Interesting. I think StackOverflow kind of discourages DISCUSSION. – Scott Hanselman Apr 14 at 3:41
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Yeah... it's a bit of a crappy forum. Limited replies, default sorted by score not time, no threading, ability for anyone to edit rude words into your post just because i feel like it... Damn good for questions that have specific answers though. – Shog9 Apr 14 at 3:47
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To be fair, it's a crappy forum because it's designed for programming-related questions with specific answers, not broad discussions such as this one. – cletus Apr 14 at 6:14
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Hm....seems like "how can I become a better programmer using sites like stackoverflow" is a VERY programming related question. – Scott Hanselman Apr 16 at 18:15
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37 Answers

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Tomorrow you will be giving a talk and presumably (hopefully) lots of programmers will be in the room listening to what you have to say. One would hope they will find it a worthwile use of their time.

That is networking, listening to others and learning. There are lots of mediums like conferences, user group meetings and now on-line social sites.

Now clearly each of these mediums has advantages and disadvantages as well as unique characteristics.

Is the question "Does networking have value?" or is it "What types of networking are best served by online social media as opposed to other forms of networking?"

Ten years ago I was working for a large computer company and we had a project involving a team of people from all over the world. The project included some meetings where we were all in the same room (expensive travel costs) and between those sessions we would keep in touch over the network (much cheaper, but someone in Australia keeps much different office hours than someone on the east coast off the US).

So the bottom line is that I believe that one needs to use multiple forms of networking and not just one. User groups, conferences, telephone email and twitter etc all have there place and are best used as part of an overall networking strategy.

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From a product group perspective it's just a great way to get a quick read on issues right when you need it (in the early stages) and from a myriad of different perspectives: languages, preferences, abilities (and disabilities) etc. Things go faster, better and (hopefully) we build better products as a result.

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Everyone I talk to who uses Twitter, Blogs, StackOverflow, etc, says that these sites make them "better developers."

Well then, let me be the exception for you. I've tried Twitter, Facebook, and other "social networks" and found them to be completely useless to me, both personally and as a developer. I'm extremely introverted, but I'll take personal interaction over virtual interaction almost any day -- and when I want to be alone, I don't want online interaction, either.

Blogs (other people's) are useful because they often have the answer to a tech question. There's nothing magic about the "blog" format -- it's just how a lot of information is stored today. USENET is also useful, for the same reason, though harder to search (Google Groups is pretty lame compared to Google Web Search).

StackOverflow is a special kind of site where I can be lazy. It's like USENET or any other forum, except there's a silly point system, so people fall over each other to be helpful. (I guess WLIIA-style useless points are really valuable to some people!) When I'm using one of the handful of languages popular here (C#, Java, SQL, Python, Ruby), and I'm stuck (and nobody else is available at the office), I can usually get an answer on SO in almost no time at all.

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Social Networking sites helps me to connect to the outer world (outside my development world) and to understand other prospective about me or my development , all the work/development we do is to provide benefits/services to others to our users/business and there is no better place then social networking sites to get feedback of others towards my work ,

and secondly It is not possible for me to work as pair with great people around in our world but i can certainly can connect to them on social networking sites to be a better developer.

Social Networking sites are best way to provide benefits to other in their professional life so it helps me more to become better developer.

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I am not a developer (anymore); but I do a lot of SN and here my gains:

I am enriched with ideas and concepts I never considered before

I get to see things I did consider before from a different perspective

I get to see dots (concepts) connect what I wouldn’t have otherwise

I get to help; and that helps me a better human

I get to learn; and that makes me a better human

Filiberto Selvas

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Developers also become better developers by attending local user groups. For example, if you want to learn how to write secure code then attending local OWASP chapter meetings is a good next step...

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This is a wonderful opinion. The things mentioned are unanimous and needs to be appreciated by everyone.

IT Solution

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