I could probably answer your OOXML question... if there actually was a question. And as Craig noted, the tags on your second-to-last question were way off (and a simple retag would have bumped it!).
Some of the questions you've listed are also quite old. As in more than a year old. Have you been following the guidelines in How to get attention for your old, unanswered questions?
With a rather hefty 107 questions to your name, the law of averages is not on your side - some of them are going to go unanswered without the occasional revision or bounty.
Now to be fair, I'm not trying to pin the blame entirely on you. It's definitely true that the community tends to attack very easy questions (especially bikeshed questions) like a pack of ferocious dogs. That's why some of us are such staunch advocates of question closing and downvoting, to prevent all the attention from being lavished on yet another "what's your favorite X" question.
But even if we eliminated all subjective questions, easy questions still tend to monopolize community attention. Consider that:
- Easy questions take very little time to answer;
- People only vote on questions/answers they understand;
- The programming/software engineering profession has a long tail (I'm not putting any specific people down, just stating a well-known fact).
That means that early, decent answers to easy questions receive a disproportionate number of upvotes, and well-researched answers to difficult or obscure questions might get none at all. So why spend an hour working on a tough question and get 25 points if your lucky (1 upvote + accept from OP) when you can easily pick up 30 or 50 or even 100 from a dull but easy question that you can answer in 10 seconds?
I admit, even I feel this way sometimes (I try to avoid it). The founders knew this, that's why they came up with the bounty system. It changes the economics; 200 or 500 points from a bounty is much more attractive than a dozen upvotes for some 1-liner, especially since it's immune to the cap. So use the bounty system, that's exactly what it's here for.
I also hate to say this, but rep plays into it. I've asked a couple of, well maybe not obscure, but difficult questions and received answers pretty quickly from people in the top 50. It's somewhat of an enticement when somebody who's normally giving all the answers has a question they can't answer - call it ego, curiosity, or just confidence that it's likely to be an interesting question - either way, it happens. If Jon Skeet posts a question, you're going to at least have a look.
So in other words, another thing you can do is keep answering questions and building reputation - in both the quantitative and qualitative sense - and your questions are more likely to get noticed by the people who are most likely to be able to answer them.
Hopefully some of that helps.