Welcome to ISSUE #114 of The Overflow! This newsletter is by developers, for developers, written and curated by the Stack Overflow team and Cassidy Williams. This week: realistic work estimates, creating a culture of continual learning, and how Tumblr inspired a generation of women to code. The post The Overflow #114: Work estimates that account for friction, continual learning, and the coders inspired by Tumblr appeared first on Stack Overflow Blog.
Login to add comment
Other posts in this group

In this episode of Leaders of Code, Jody Bailey, Chief Product and Technology Officer at Stack Overflow, sits down with Dane Knecht, the newly appointed Chief Technology Officer at Cloudflare. https:

As a generation characterized as "digital natives," the way Gen Z interacts with and consumes knowledge is rooted in their desire for instant gratification and personalization. How will this affect th

Read on to see the latest features coming to Stack Overflow for Teams Business users! https://stackoverflow.blog/2025/06/18/smarter-teams-brighter-insights-stack-overflow-for-teams-business-summer-bun

It’s Java’s 30th anniversary! Ryan welcomes back Georges Saab, Senior VP of Development for the Java Platform Group and Chair of the OpenJDK Governing Board, to reflect on Java’s changes over the las

Ryan Donovan and Ben Popper sit down with Jamie de Guerre, SVP of Product at Together AI, to discuss the evolving landscape of AI and open-source models. They explore the significance of infrastructur

Diverse, high-quality data is a prerequisite for reliable, effective, and ethical AI solutions. https://stackoverflow.blog/2025/06/11/why-you-need-diverse-third-party-data-to-deliver-trusted-ai-soluti

Ryan and Ben welcome Tulsee Doshi and Logan Kilpatrick from Google's DeepMind to discuss the advanced capabilities of the new Gemini 2.5, the importance of feedback loops for model improvement and red