Here's a question about someone's jQuery code not working. If I say he tries to do something with the DOM, I bet that most of the people will already know what's wrong with it before reading the question itself.
There are probably more than 100 questions on jQuery where the problem is the same as in this question. Technically, these are all duplicates but it's very hard to indicate because the essence of the problem is "My jQuery doesn't work". That can have many other reasons.
SO intends to build a library of knowledge for programming problems and marking things as duplicate helps to query this library (e.g. via Google) so that no one needs to take time to write a custom answer to a custom question to solve something that has been solved many times before, i.e. the SO library already contains an answer.
Now, I'm not someone who knows a lot about a lot of different technologies, but I'm fairly confident that there are many similar "common problems" in various technologies and the situation I describe here probably occurs a lot more on SO.
I would like to know if there could be some sort of way to handle these situations more easily and quickly, i.e. a way to detect these kind of "duplicates" and give advice to anyone who intends to ask a question before it gets asked.
I don't yet have an idea myself but I wonder if we could approach this in a way that makes sense. If so, it would at least partially help to increase overall question quality, since questions about these kind of obvious and general problems would occur less.