
See that yellow box at the right? All the information you are looking for is there, but I do agree that it's not really clear and I don't think most newcomers click either link at the bottom. However if you follow both links, I honestly don't see how you can get it wrong. The FAQ has a very nice summary of what you can and cannot ask about, and the "asking help" link takes you to the "How to Ask" page, that summarizes the basic requirements for questions:
- Do your homework
- Be specific
- Make it relevant to others
- Be on-topic
- Keep an open mind
Back when I was a new user, I did click on both links before asking my first question, and whenever I'm visiting a new Stack Exchange site, the first thing I check is the FAQ. Granted, I'm very familiar with how Stack Exchange works, and still have struck out once or twice (it happens ;). I'm starting to think that we are at a point were we have too many rules & guidelines, and newcomers just take the easy way out: Ask the question, and if it's get closed, it's closed. Trial and error is what we do, we are programmers after all ;)
It's a problem, a problem I don't have a good solution for. As I already mentioned the information is there, the documentation is adequate (imho), what seems to fail is that people just don't read it, or when they do, it's a bit much and they either skim quickly through it or just read the first couple of paragraphs.
Furthermore each Stack Exchange site has its own culture and its own set of secondary guidelines, for example Stack Overflow users the [homework] tag to denote homework questions and treats them slightly differently than other questions, and Programmers has eradicated the tag and treats each question by the same standards, homework or not.
I guess one solution would be to require people to read both pages, the FAQ and How to Ask, before letting them post their first question. It'd be quite obnoxious, but it's something we already do for answers, there's a big overlay covering the answer textarea when you try to answer your first question. I don't know how effective that is, on Programmers were I'm a moderator I see people skipping it all the time (which raises an automated flag), Stack Exchange probably has or can easily get hard data to tell us if the answer overlay works or not - combining whether the user skipped it or not with the eventual fate of the answer (upvoted / downvoted / flagged / deleted).
At the end of the day, though, the problem is more of a social problem than a technical problem. People can choose not to read any kind of documentation we throw at them, however in your face it is. Polite guiding comments and edits from more familiar members of the community is what works best for questions that are a bit ..., but salvageable.
System messages can be ignored, similarly to how the FAQ is ignored a thousand times per day, but I don't think a comment along the lines of "Hey, welcome to Stack Overflow! Can you tell us what exactly the error message you're getting is?" can be easily ignored. And if it is, well, just down vote and go on with your day...