To my mind, the community needs better questions. To be precise, well-researched questions. Questions are building blocks of a Q&A sites because there can be no answers without questions, so the 'A' in 'Q&A' cannot exist without the 'Q'. At the moment questions in some tags I follow (Python, C, C++) are getting weaker and weaker: there are many duplicates, and - this is just as important - more and more questions that can be answered with four letters: RTFM. Seriously, lots of askers can just open up a manual and get the answer themselves! So... Should we allow four-letter answers then? Or link-only answers?
Of course not, because otherwiseif we do, Stack Overflow will become "man-powered Google", where people provide links to stuff and explain in unnecessary detail how to change some code so that it works. This is why, even in presence of so many questions, that 'A' in 'Q&A' fades away, and the very philosophy of the site seems to be falling apart. People who don't receive answers because the latter are easily "googlable" and, again, because we aren't "man-powered Google", may get mad and/or just leave for good.
Also, many questions are poorly written, namely they:
- don't have a question at all
- are poorly formatted
- are just dumps of peoples' homeworks
These also don't receive many answers because there's nothing to answer or it's too hard to decipher what is being asked or the post meets some closing criterion. Those who didn't get a satisfying answer may get mad and/or just leave for good.
How to get these better questions, though? Make sure the askers understand how to ask questions and what to ask! Where is this topic discussed? In the Help Centre! Now the solution just boils down to making people read the Help Centre. We just need to understand how the community works and what it does and does not do. To understand this before posting questions because otherwise the asker will be told this explicitly (see their question closed/downvoted or via comments), which some may take as criticism and/or insult. Why feel judged or insulted after having posted something if you could've simply read the posting guidelines first?
All in all, I think the community needs better questions, and to generate better questions, people should be educated about the acceptable ways of asking them before they start posting. This will at least filter out some potential questions that meet closing criteria. So, RTSOM: Read The Stack Overflow Manual!