I crunched some numbers I got from SE's site directory on daily visits:
Sites Daily Visits (%)
---------------------------------------
Stack Overflow 1 2.8m (82%)
Launched Sites 31 595k (17%)
Public Betas 42 22.4k (>1%)
Perhaps this chart will help you visualize the information above:

As you can see, SO easily beats the entire SE network in daily visits. All of its 73 sites.
Is it possible that this is happening because this Q&A format was designed for programming questions and is not that well suited to other topics? Or perhaps it's a Q&A format that makes a lot more sense to programmers than other people?
I'll admit that when I first used SO, it just made too much sense to me. My sister is interested in many topics covered by the newer SE sites, but for whatever reason she doesn't find this system appealing. It also didn't appeal to other non-programmer friends I introduced SE to.
Considering many users on the newer SE sites come from SO (and are thus programmers), this might further mask a deficiency in appealing to non-programmers. I realize I'm asking this to an audience mostly of programmers, but is it possible that our Q&A format is not that well suited to a more general audience?
EDIT: Yes, it's not entirely fair to compare SO to the rest of the network because it's much older.
But SO had 231,070 questions one year after its launch (2008-07-31), and 282,028 questions one year after the public beta started (2008-09-15). Many other SE sites have been around for much longer, and have nowhere near this many questions.
The 2nd and 3rd most popular sites in the network, ServerFault (2y 8mo.) and SuperUser (2y 5mo.) have 201,606 questions between them right now. This is less than what SO had in one year.

(from the launch of the private beta)
I crunched more numbers. Here's a spreadsheet with the number of questions after one year into a public beta.
Stack Overflow had 282,028 questions one year after public beta. 22 other sites combined to 195,031 questions after one year. Here's another delicious pie:

(12 sites omitted from legend)