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May 5, 2014 at 22:03 comment added egrunin I think people are missing puser's point: within a given language or framework, questions will inevitably start as broadly good, then gradually the "easy" questions will stop as they get answered, leaving only the esoteric and the poor-quality. Yes, a new language or framework will start the process over again.
May 3, 2014 at 14:30 history edited Peter Mortensen CC BY-SA 3.0
Copy edited. Removed historical information (ref. <http://meta.stackexchange.com/a/230693>). (its = possessive, it's = "it is" or "it has". See for example <http://www.wikihow.com/Use-its-and-it's>.)
May 1, 2014 at 1:05 comment added Victor Zakharov As I replied to another answered here, technology is changing, answers become out-of-date. Yes, it was easier to gain reputation back then, because nothing was basically asked, but it does not mean it's impossible to gain reputation now. If only we can deal with those "bad" questions.
May 1, 2014 at 0:51 comment added AaronLS This is exactly the same effect you see in Wikipedia in terms of new good articles over time. Yes there are new technologies, but that won't be as many questions as there were when stackoverflow began. You would see number of good questions per week decrease over time as an inverse logarithmic curve.
Apr 30, 2014 at 14:51 comment added Noumenon As another user with rep in the low hundreds, this represents my perspective as well.
Apr 30, 2014 at 7:11 comment added guymid I don't know why this answer was downvoted or why this answer wasn't given to the why-is-stack-overflow-so-negative-of-late thread. Of course there are new technologies but the bulk of low quality questions are about the existing technologies about which most things have been answered, so naturally there are fewer good quality questions on those subjects. Yes there are SO mechanics that need refining, but the overall reason for both these threads is simply that the good users cannot ask many more good quality questions leaving lower experience users to dominate with asking poorer questions.
Apr 29, 2014 at 10:48 comment added puser @Tomalak I'm sure that lack of self-improvement has always been the case, its just stackoverflow wasn't mainstream enough so only 'die hards' used the site. so now before there was die hards with good questions, now there are die hards without good questions (already been asked) and other people with worse questions. Though if those worse questions weren't asked, stackoverflow would be pretty inactive.
Apr 29, 2014 at 10:44 comment added Tomalak Quite often, actually. I agree that someone has to ask these questions (even simple ones, because "simple" is not correlated to "bad"). What I'm missing of late is the determination to self-improve. It seems to be epidemic in the industry, if you look at the top answer in this thread.
Apr 29, 2014 at 10:41 comment added puser @Tomalak A) true, i'm not saying that good questions will ever completely dry up, just that in general there are now fewer good questions than bad questions. B) how often do you find the answer (maybe on stackoverflow) and not need to ask a question, this agrees with my point.
Apr 29, 2014 at 10:35 comment added Tomalak A) There will always be new frameworks, languages, techniques, applications to ask questions about. It's impossible to have all thinkable questions handled. B) You'll see an enormous skew towards answers in my account. I'm asking a question only if I'm really, really stuck with something, and that happens very rarely. For the smaller part because I have a bit of experience, for the larger part because I have the determination to find out myself. I'd rather read the RFC and the language spec than ask a question. I'd rather search and try for 5 days than ask a question.
Apr 29, 2014 at 10:25 history answered puser CC BY-SA 3.0