Live Q&A with Gabe Koscky

This is a Live Q&A Session with Gabe Koscky, Enterprise Custom...
Apr 11, 2019 18:04
This was nice. Thanks everyone for your questions.
I hope the answers were helpful
6
Apr 11, 2019 18:03
@Configmessage I'm hoping it will make things easier, yes. We're also moving to containerize things, which will give us even more control over the "environment". That would be like tech Christmas.
Apr 11, 2019 18:02
@X4748 No... Not that I know of, at least... If the hacker did a good job then I'll never know
2
Apr 11, 2019 18:02
I'm also 7/8 odd time signatures
2
Apr 11, 2019 18:01
@Marcy Yes, that. We're the ones who handle technical questions that come in from customers. Bugs, feature requests, general questions... And we have the liberty to look through the code, figure out exactly why things aren't working and submit a fix (if we're confident it works). And deal with the whole infrastructure side of things for deployment.
Apr 11, 2019 17:58
@PiperBarrett Not necessarily a bug, but the complaints about the site search. Because we essentially have no better answer than "we're aware of the problem, and are working on it"
Apr 11, 2019 17:57
@Configmessage Yep. Sometime later this year (or early next year)
Apr 11, 2019 17:56
@X4748 The badges aren't triggered when the action happens. We have a scheduled task that checks the site periodically for recent badge-worthy actions.
Apr 11, 2019 17:55
The customers that allow multiple departments to use the same site can choose to use different Teams for different departments, or just have everyone living together on the same site. Depends on their needs, really.

Some companies are big enough to have multiple Teams just for their technical department.
Apr 11, 2019 17:54
@AlizaBerger It depends. We require a minimum number of users (500) in order to give them their own site and some companies do have that many developers, some don't. At the end of the day, while Stack is very good at handling programming questions, it's also very good for any kind of "canonical" knowledge that you want to share with the whole company.
Apr 11, 2019 17:50
@Des The same thing happens with the administrative tools. Everything was built under the assumption that the only people to have access to them would be Stack Overflow developers, with the power to fix whatever is going wrong. So they're not very user friendly... It's hard to blame that decision back then, but I do wish we didn't have so many things Designed By Programmers™
Apr 11, 2019 17:48
@Des Stack Overflow was never really intended to be packaged and distributed to other people, so our code makes a lot of assumptions about the underlying hardware that sometimes end up causing problems.
Apr 11, 2019 17:47
@PiperBarrett I'm much better at services now
Apr 11, 2019 17:44
@X4748 Same as on the public site: Windows, IIS, .Net, SQL Server. The reasons for it are explained here: meta.stackexchange.com/q/10369/208518
Apr 11, 2019 17:42
@Marcy Not really. Most companies already have their own internal chat/messaging platform already (It's Slack... pretty much always Slack), so Stack chat wouldn't provide that much value, especially when you factor in the time and effort needed to maintain and support it.
Apr 11, 2019 17:40
@Des Yeah, that's something we offer if the customer asks for it. They have different reasons for it, mostly depending on the type and size of the company. It works pretty much the same way as the public teams.
Apr 11, 2019 17:37
@Courtny Other than that, everything is pretty much the same, as it should be. At the end of the day, we’re delivering exactly what the customers paid for: their Stack Overflow site, so it should look and function like the public site as much as possible.
Apr 11, 2019 17:37
@Courtny Many of the Stack Overflow “auxiliary” features don’t exist on Enterprise. So no Meta, no Chat, no Developer Story, no Jobs, and no ability to have multiple instances inside a network - like Stack Exchange - as there’s not much need for them in that environment. A few administrative pages are also hidden from view, to preserve a few secrets here and there.
Apr 11, 2019 17:36
So we need to think about how a feature can be improved (or reduced) to better serve an Enterprise environment and, sometimes, things just... leak
Apr 11, 2019 17:35
@Configmessage There's also the fact that we need to make sure Enterprise sites are as similar as possible to the public site, but also fundamentally different in some other ways. So development isn't very straightforward because we have to work around what the Core team is doing.
Apr 11, 2019 17:33
@Configmessage Most of the time we have to rely on what the logs say, because we can't replicate their side of things. Thankfully Stack logs a whole lot of things. So we look at that, make a lot of assumptions, try to reproduce whatever we can, research a lot, then try to come up with an answer.
Apr 11, 2019 17:31
@Configmessage Sometimes we don't control the infrastructure, if the customer is hosting it themselves. So we get very unexpected errors that have to do with their particular setup... And that's very hard to debug.
Apr 11, 2019 17:28
@JuanM Something that I learned (a bit too late, maybe) is that the people who are waiting on you to go in there and fix things want, more than anything, to know you're actively thinking about their problem. So just thinking out loud while on a call helps, because they know you're not either totally suck or not caring. You need to be careful with that, though, because do it too much and it'll just look like you have no idea what you're doing, and are just firing random instructions to kill time.
Apr 11, 2019 17:25
@Andy We provide a lot of guidance to customers on how to run their site. There's a whole other, non-engineering, side of customer success that's focused only on that. Even though it's not, technically, part of my job, I'm able to help them a lot because I did it for many years.
Apr 11, 2019 17:23
@JuanM When things go up in flames, definitely. The companies are paying us to have a site up and running, so every minute counts when we're trying to get them back online. And a lot of the time we're on a call with them, trying to figure out what's going on, so we're essentially debugging a major system, over screen-share, with someone over our shoulders, and money and reputation on the line. It's pretty intense.
Apr 11, 2019 17:21
If you're talking about the quality of **my** work, then yes. 100% :D
But overall, it's easy for us to argue that we're the best Q&A platform around, because we're, by far, the most successful Q&A platform around. That being said, this is not a very contested market (yet), so getting here somewhat early, and backed by our public success, definitely helps a lot.
Apr 11, 2019 17:15
@BhargavRao Yes. That's pretty much it. I don't think much of what I'm working on will make its way back to the Public API.
Apr 11, 2019 17:14
@Configmessage I don't usually search for things in Portuguese, so results from the Portuguese site don't really come up. But I've ended up there occasionally, when I remember there's a question there about that issue.
Apr 11, 2019 17:12
@BhargavRao Currently the API authenticate requests using the user's private API key. So you can only do actions on the site, using the write-only routes, as yourself. For Enterprise instances, a lot of customers want to use the API to integrate with other platforms, so it's important that an application can act on behalf of a user that's different than the one that owns the API key that was used to build the application.
Apr 11, 2019 17:08
@PiperBarrett Does anyone?
Apr 11, 2019 17:07
1) The Enterprise API is essentially the same as the public SE API. So there are a lot of nice-to-have features that are not present, like service accounts. It's also missing a bunch of information that is private on the public site, but not an issue on Enterprise instances, like credential information for accounts.
It's also important that we implement the ability to impersonate other users, so the companies can build nicer integrations with other systems.

2) We do **a lot** of manual testing. And, in part thanks to Enterprise, Stack Overflow now has a real automated test suite, that help
Apr 11, 2019 17:04
@Marcy One of the things we do on Enterprise is providing a lot of guidance on how the site works, and what our model is like for building communities. So the CM experience was very useful when trying to document things, and providing customers with information on how the site actually works under the hood.
Apr 11, 2019 16:59
Hey! My pleasure!