(This is about a question to which my answer unexpectedly received dozens of upvotes, so you may not consider me an impartial observer.)
Yesterday this question about optimizing the sorting of 10 integers was asked:
Fastest way to sort 10 numbers? (numbers are 32 bit)
The question received a few answers and comments, and the discussion included e.g. optimization by using parallel processing on recent hardware. Then today, the question was marked as a duplicate of this 5-year-old question about sorting 6 integers:
Fastest sort of fixed length 6 int array
(UPDATE: the duplicate flag seems to have been removed now. I'm still interested in hearing your views on this question in general, though.)
I was wondering whether it makes sense to mark optimization questions as duplicates of related older questions, since what is optimal in one case may not be optimal in another (albeit very similar) case, and also because optimization is closely related to evolution in hardware, and what was optimal 5 years ago, may not be optimal now.
UPDATE: In reaction to some of the comments: I think the problem is that the asker's renewed interest in an old question doens't generate updated answers (unless he sets a bounty). Asking a new question seems to be the best way to say "I have a similar problem, but I'm looking for new answers".