Just out of curiosity, will SO eventually reach a near saturation point where on average any new question will provide near zero new information?
We already are in this state, which makes a lot of Stack Overflow regulars fairly grumpy: on average, any new question is about someone getting a null reference exception for the first time, or doing something else silly that has been asked about many times before.
However, to quote PHP: a fractal of bad design's opening paragraph:
programming is a hilariously young discipline, and none of us have the slightest clue what we’re doing.
New technologies and languages are always being developed. The programming world's knowledge is always growing, and new best practices for what to do with existing technologies are always evolving.
Our discipline is growing far too quickly for us to hit the barrier of every possible question that could possibly be asked about it anytime soon.
Even sites like PhysicsPhysics or Mathematics which cover ancient disciplines show no signs of hitting such a barrier. There's simply too much stuff to ask about: if both have 10,000 concepts, you'd have to have just short of 100,000,000 questions (10000 × 10000) before you have one question about each thing in combination with one other thing. And you're going to have more than one question about each of those combinations, and that doesn't cover combinations of three or four things together, or using a thing several times with itself.
Physics.SE has only recently passed 100,000 questions, let alone a hundred million.
So in total: no. We're very unlikely to reach a saturation point anytime soon.