What people, including the article writer, don't get is that Stack Overflow is a website for serious computer science professionals, not wannabe coders looking for easy homework help and fun conversation. This is coming from someone who was on the receiving end of some pretty nasty anti-newbie sentiment, but all that did was teach me how to behave like a professional and still take down trolls. (My speech "A Field Guide to Common Nerds" is based entirely on those experiences, and how a newbie can survive in the programming field.)
Stack Overflow isn't perfect, but it achieved its goal of having more reliable programming information than anywhere else online, shy of the documentation, in my humble opinion! Its flaws are not unique - in fact, Stack Overflow is considerably nicer than other similar communities, namely programming forums and Usenet, which have a considerably larger noise-to-info ratio anyhow. The community's flaws are based in the personality quirks common to the computer science industry, which Eric S. Raymond did a pretty darn good job of documenting.
That said, I do think that Stack Overflow could be made less hostile to beginners who really do want to learn and aren't just asking us to "give me da codez". Somewhere else on meta, a year or two ago, someone made the brilliant proposal of new users having to actually complete an interactive training session before posting to Stack Overflow, in which they learn what a good question, a good answer, and a good comment should look like. For one thing, it'd cut down on OUR work as reviewers.
As much as I hate getting downvotes, I think the mechanism is still important for flagging especially problematic questions. Without it, we're more likely to create an atmosphere that, while "friendly" to beginners, mirrors the Eternal September on Usenet, when the noise overwhelmed information because of the sudden uncontrollable influx of idiot-category newbies.
More than anything, I think the problem with downvotes is that many people on Stack Overflow misunderstand a downvote as a proverbial "dislike" button, much like on YouTube, and never bother to read the tooltip.
I honestly believe that if downvoting REQUIRED a comment, at least an anonymous one, explaining "why" - and if the tooltip text were clearly written above that special comment box - we would get less mindless downvoting, and a more constructive environment. The more habitually unfriendly people would actually have to come to terms with the fact that they are often downvoting just because they're arrogant, self-important twits, not because the question or answer is inherently bad. Then, the constructive downvotes would be able to survive, and actually provide a means for the poster to IMPROVE future questions and answers.
This downvote comment could even be multiple-choice like our flag box is now. One extra click, and still anonymous, and it would provide the information that others need to A) improve their posts, and B) recognize why an answer is a bad idea before they ignore the "dislikes" (so they think) and run with it.
Those steps alone would go a long way to improving the community, without losing sight of why Stack Overflow is here in the first place, or irritating the living daylights out of those of us who know what on earth we're doing.