![]() I hope you don’t mind me plugging it here, but there is also a proposal for a Theoretical Physics StackExchange. All the sites in the SE 2.0 network have the support of the Stack Exchange team for site promotion and development to give them the best possible chance to succeed, and they’re kept up to date with all changes made to the software that underlies Stack Overflow (which was not the case for SE 1.0 sites). ![]() (Math Overflow is a notable exception, because it happened to have a larger group of committed supporters from the beginning)Īt some point, the Stack Overflow team realized their system wasn’t working so well, so they called off SE 1.0 (leaving the existing sites in place, but blocking any new ones) and created a new system, Stack Exchange 2.0, in which sites would have to go through a community approval process to be created, presumably guaranteeing that they would have a critical mass of people right from the start. Most of the sites created using that system never really took off, probably in part because maintenance and promotion were the sole responsibility of the individual site owners. Januat 1:34 when the people of Stack Overflow first decided to expand to other topics besides computers, they first created a system, Stack Exchange 1.0 which would allow anyone to create a site using what was, at the time, essentially the same software as Stack Overflow. ![]()
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