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This is like saying that for one to grow, others have to sacrifice their own growth.

What if we implemented your idea?
  
Let's assume that we implemented your idea (It's not going to happen anyways). My first reaction to any other answer would be to downvote them, so as to get more visibility to my answer. If you implement a feature to penalise downvoting (Which is already there), I will not upvote any single answer. Why would I? I am not giving away my wealth of reputation to any unknown stranger, even if the answer helped me.

Is it making things easier for newbies?
  
You're not making it easier for new user, you're making it difficult for them to get visibility, because the existing user will already know the tricks. Remember only the fittest survive in an competition.

And I suppose you're a programmer (It's StackOverflow), so you forgot the golden rule of programming. Never fix something which isn't broken. The current system is not broken.

So what about the disparity?
  
We all know that the issue exists, but this is not the solution. To get the solution, first identify the root cause of the problem. Why a new user can't keep up with the older ones? Acc. to me there is just one reason, because they don't give a damn about the FAQ. Very few reads them. New users don't know how to phrase the question and forget about searching before posting. They assume that this site will help them discuss their problem, whereis it's not the goal of SO. Most of the time, the questions are trivial enough which can be solved by looking at the documentation. The community is not anti-new user. The community just does not tolerate people who have not researched enough before posting an answer or want us to do their homework.

But the issue exists and SO is doing nothing about it.
  
And SO guys are not unaware about this. They are trying to fix things without any chaotic measure like what you have suggested. One measure they took is to not fix the currently working system, but create a wholly different feature, keeping new users in center. It's called DocumentationDocumentation (Funny name). It's going to be a documentation we all missed when we started programming for the first time. It'll include examples and tutorials for the said class/method. I say that's better than Fixed point rating system. You can follow the discussion and suggest your ideassuggest your ideas to make it better too.

I hope this answers your concern.

This is like saying that for one to grow, others have to sacrifice their own growth.

What if we implemented your idea?
  Let's assume that we implemented your idea (It's not going to happen anyways). My first reaction to any other answer would be to downvote them, so as to get more visibility to my answer. If you implement a feature to penalise downvoting (Which is already there), I will not upvote any single answer. Why would I? I am not giving away my wealth of reputation to any unknown stranger, even if the answer helped me.

Is it making things easier for newbies?
  You're not making it easier for new user, you're making it difficult for them to get visibility, because the existing user will already know the tricks. Remember only the fittest survive in an competition.

And I suppose you're a programmer (It's StackOverflow), so you forgot the golden rule of programming. Never fix something which isn't broken. The current system is not broken.

So what about the disparity?
  We all know that the issue exists, but this is not the solution. To get the solution, first identify the root cause of the problem. Why a new user can't keep up with the older ones? Acc. to me there is just one reason, because they don't give a damn about the FAQ. Very few reads them. New users don't know how to phrase the question and forget about searching before posting. They assume that this site will help them discuss their problem, whereis it's not the goal of SO. Most of the time, the questions are trivial enough which can be solved by looking at the documentation. The community is not anti-new user. The community just does not tolerate people who have not researched enough before posting an answer or want us to do their homework.

But the issue exists and SO is doing nothing about it.
  And SO guys are not unaware about this. They are trying to fix things without any chaotic measure like what you have suggested. One measure they took is to not fix the currently working system, but create a wholly different feature, keeping new users in center. It's called Documentation (Funny name). It's going to be a documentation we all missed when we started programming for the first time. It'll include examples and tutorials for the said class/method. I say that's better than Fixed point rating system. You can follow the discussion and suggest your ideas to make it better too.

I hope this answers your concern.

This is like saying that for one to grow, others have to sacrifice their own growth.

What if we implemented your idea? 
Let's assume that we implemented your idea (It's not going to happen anyways). My first reaction to any other answer would be to downvote them, so as to get more visibility to my answer. If you implement a feature to penalise downvoting (Which is already there), I will not upvote any single answer. Why would I? I am not giving away my wealth of reputation to any unknown stranger, even if the answer helped me.

Is it making things easier for newbies? 
You're not making it easier for new user, you're making it difficult for them to get visibility, because the existing user will already know the tricks. Remember only the fittest survive in an competition.

And I suppose you're a programmer (It's StackOverflow), so you forgot the golden rule of programming. Never fix something which isn't broken. The current system is not broken.

So what about the disparity? 
We all know that the issue exists, but this is not the solution. To get the solution, first identify the root cause of the problem. Why a new user can't keep up with the older ones? Acc. to me there is just one reason, because they don't give a damn about the FAQ. Very few reads them. New users don't know how to phrase the question and forget about searching before posting. They assume that this site will help them discuss their problem, whereis it's not the goal of SO. Most of the time, the questions are trivial enough which can be solved by looking at the documentation. The community is not anti-new user. The community just does not tolerate people who have not researched enough before posting an answer or want us to do their homework.

But the issue exists and SO is doing nothing about it. 
And SO guys are not unaware about this. They are trying to fix things without any chaotic measure like what you have suggested. One measure they took is to not fix the currently working system, but create a wholly different feature, keeping new users in center. It's called Documentation (Funny name). It's going to be a documentation we all missed when we started programming for the first time. It'll include examples and tutorials for the said class/method. I say that's better than Fixed point rating system. You can follow the discussion and suggest your ideas to make it better too.

I hope this answers your concern.

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This is like saying that for one to grow, others have to sacrifice their own growth.

What if we implemented your idea?
Let's assume that we implemented your idea (It's not going to happen anyways). My first reaction to any other answer would be to downvote them, so as to get more visibility to my answer. If you implement a feature to penalise downvoting (Which is already there), I will not upvote any single answer. Why would I? I am not giving away my wealth of reputation to any unknown stranger, even if the answer helped me.

Is it making things easier for newbies?
You're not making it easier for new user, you're making it difficult for them to get visibility, because the existing user will already know the tricks. Remember only the fittest survive in an competition.

And I suppose you're a programmer (It's StackOverflow), so you forgot the golden rule of programming. Never fix something which isn't broken. The current system is not broken.

So what about the disparity?
We all know that the issue exists, but this is not the solution. To get the solution, first identify the root cause of the problem. Why a new user can't keep up with the older ones? Acc. to me there is just one reason, because they don't give a damn about the FAQ. Very few reads them. New users don't know how to phrase the question and forget about searching before posting. They assume that this site will help them discuss their problem, whereis it's not the goal of SO. Most of the time, the questions are trivial enough which can be solved by looking at the documentation. The community is not anti-new user. The community just does not tolerate people who have not researched enough before posting an answer or want us to do their homework.

But the issue exists and SO is doing nothing about it.
And SO guys are not unaware about this. They are trying to fix things without any chaotic measure like what you have suggested. One measure they took is to not fix the currently working system, but create a wholly different feature, keeping new users in center. It's called Documentation (Funny name). It's going to be a documentation we all missed when we started programming for the first time. It'll include examples and tutorials for the said class/method. I say that's better than Fixed point rating system. You can follow the discussion and suggest your ideas to make it better too.

I hope this answers your concern.