Normally Kevin does these updates, but I wanted to take an opportunity to talk about how Documentation is doing from my perspective as a community manager. For the last 3 years or so, building communities of specialists has been my specialty. In my experience, communities on Stack Exchange have similar lifecycles:
As Shog9 showed, we passed the first stage months ago.
While reputation seemed to work in the confined space of a private beta, it was abundantly clear at launch the reputation system didn't work. So we changed it. Twice. There's every chance we'll tweak it again, but the philosophy of rewarding work on Documentation roughly at the same rate as Q&A will remain. Currently, the median Documentation contributor has earned 7 points of reputation (up from 6 in September) compared to 10 points for the median outside of Docs. Since launch, less than 1% of Stack Overflow reputation has come from Documentation, which roughly coincides with activity. It's not a perfect system, but it seems reasonably consistent with the rest of Stack Overflow at the moment.
Unlike questions and answers, most contributions to Documentation are subject to review. Initially, we hoped that people would watch the tags they were interested in and that reviews would happen organically. We were wrong. After adding a global review queue (with 2.3k items!), we (re)discovered that some people just love to make tasks go away. So we added audits and review bans. It also seemed reasonable to give experienced users more influence on the queue, so we gave reviews from high-reputation users and silver tag badge holders more weight.
The public launch revealed bugs. Lots and lots of bugs. In fact the feedback has been a bit overwhelming. Many of the changes made (or planned) since beta have started in meta: reputation changes, review queue, rejection reasons, plagiarism warnings, improvement request refactoring, and a discussion area for example. We've done a lot in 2016 considering our team consists of 3 developers, a designer, and me, the resident cheerleader. It's inevitable that some important feature requests and bugs haven't been implemented. We'll be onboarding a dedicated product manager soon, who will help us prioritize future work. Kevin has done a solid job in the role, but he's been stretched too thin for too long.