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Stack Overflow Blog

Paging Charity! How can engineering leaders avoid becoming Bond villains? Code isn’t the only thing causing your production failures Your AI shipped a backend that boots. That is the whole problem. The 2026 Developer Survey is now open (for human developers only)! Oh the places you’ll go with spatial data Dispatches from O'Reilly: From capabilities to responsibilities You don’t understand DNS like you think you do The new bottleneck - Stack Overflow AI agents are a confused deputy with the keys to your kingdom If context is king, architecture is the castle Selenium vs Cypress vs Playwright: Choosing Your Test Automation Framework AI agents expose the security checks you never actually wrote Designing CherryScript: Optimizing Data-Driven Workflows via Custom Python-Based Interpreters Paging Charity? How do I get my leaders to stop running teams Into the ground? Developers are emotionally attached to their tools When the cost of code approaches zero, what does engineering leadership look like? Announcing Stack Overflow for Agents Creating checkpoints by gaslighting a Postgres database What can 500 years of journalism teach developers about AI trustworthiness? Making the OWASP top ten in the vibe code era What it takes to be a player in the international AI game Best of the Heap: First post of the past The find out stage of AI is just supply chain and password protection In an AI world, the most valuable developers will be both artisans and builders Agents on a leash: Agentic AI remains mostly single-agent and monitored at work Do you have what it takes to run AI in production? 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Building a Google Drive Sync Engine that Survives MV3 Service Workers Connecting the dots for accurate AI When the Sensor Starts Thinking: SnortML, Agentic AI, and the Evolving Architecture of Intrusion Detection OAuth 2.0 – Device flow explained for Engineers, especially for Backend Engineers Compile-Time Map and Compile-Time Mutable Variable with C++26 Reflection No Dumb Questions: What is an MCP server and why do I care? AI giveth and AI taketh CPU How we replaced Ingress-NGINX at Stack Overflow What (un)exactly do you mean by semantic search? 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The logos, ethos, and pathos of your LLMs Why demand for code is infinite: How AI creates more developer jobs AI attention span so good it shouldn’t be legal Code smells for AI agents: Q&A with Eno Reyes of Factory Generating text with diffusion (and ROI with LLMs)
Introducing the Heap, the software engineering blog for everyone
Ryan Donovan · 2026-05-11 · via Stack Overflow Blog

When I started at Stack Overflow nearly seven years ago, my primary duty was to manage the blog. My boss at the time decided to treat the blog like an editorial outlet with an engineering focus, with external contributors providing articles that discussed what life was like as a software engineer alongside our own work. It proved successful; many of those contributed articles are among our most popular and insightful pieces.

Personally, I wanted more voices on the blog, but I was limited by our distribution channels and the time it took to source and edit contributions. Stack Overflow has always been a place for the software engineering community to share their knowledge and trade insights so everyone could build better. Our Q&A covered the problems and pitfalls that come from creating software; maybe the blog could cover what engineers thought about their work and the world they’re creating.

A few months ago, we explored the possibility of opening up articles on the main Stack Overflow site. While we ultimately decided to not move forward with that idea, we did keep the lines open to see if there was continued interest in reader-contributed articles. There continued to be a steady stream of interest, so we decided that we’d host community blog posts on The Overflow blog.

Today, I’m happy to share that we’ve opened The Heap, a place for software engineers, technologists, and all manner of folks involved in the construction of tech to share their thoughts with the world. This is very beta right now, and the manual process is slow, but we want to start sharing the ideas you all have with the world and encourage more of you to write hot takes, best practices, and advice for the community.

For those of you wondering about the name, it’s a programming reference. Our primary public site is named after an error that occurs on the stack, a memory structure that stores local variables and function calls. Another common memory structure is the heap, which is explicitly allocated and deallocated in no particular order. It speaks of the vastness of what it can hold, and I hope to see you all creating pointers to locations in the Heap.

This is the most basic of MVPs right now; posting is manual and involves a lot of emailing. We’re not letting everything through, because as anyone who’s seen the raw feed of a comment field knows, the internet loves to spam. In the future, we’re hoping to add direct submissions on the site, voting, and easier discovery. But if you want to promote the best hotels in Tallahassee, maybe look elsewhere.

All articles will be licensed under a CC BY-SA 4.0 grant, which allows anyone to publish, remix, and quote these articles, and is the same license applied to questions and answers on StackOverflow.com. The best of the articles may find their way into the newsletter or get promoted to the main blog feed. Either way, we encourage you to promote anything you publish with us—and any work you publish is work you should be proud of.

So if you’ve got something you’ve been dying to share with the Stack Overflow community but don’t quite have a place to share it, give us a shout. We’d be happy to add your voice to The Heap.