I was listening to Scott Hanselman's podcast #158 (
http://www.hanselminutes.com/default.aspx?showID=176), which was an interview with Joel Spolsky, founder of Fog Creek Software.
A couple of take aways ... first, Joel Spolsky is a wickedly smart dude. BTW, this is the same "Joel" that I was picking on a few days ago in my "Kevin On Hiring" blog post. I still stand by the things I said in that post, but it makes me nervous when I start picking a fight with someone of Joel's intellect.
Second, stackoverflow.com is pretty cool. I've run across this site a few times while Googling for stuff, but now I'm starting to go directly to stackoverflow.com for searches on programming-related questions.
I've never been a huge fan of Google. I use it, of course, and I get useful results from it from time to time. But a lot of times, man is it frustrating. It isn't optimized for searching for programming-related questions. That's the problem stackoverflow.com was created to solve. It's community-oriented, so users can vote on the best answers to questions, and if you participate in answering questions, you can build up "reputation" points. Like I said, it's pretty cool. To learn more about the motiviation behind stackoverflow, listen to the podcast above. Then, give stackoverflow.com a whirl.