My Findings
I wanted to answer my own question and share my findings.
What am I doing wrong? What am I missing?
The answer to that question sadly is, that I did not post on meta. After posting to meta, the questions I asked got attention (mostly positive and mostly constructive). But this can't be the answer to the low feedback problem!
Are my questions to specific/complicated? Is there something like asking to complicated questions which results in no/very few views/answers/comments?
As was pointed out in one answer, I would think they are. However, the majority said that there is nothing wrong with them. Also the majority felt like, there are not enough experts on this site, who could answer said questions.
Everybody starts as an amateur
I have to strongly agree with Roman, who stated in the comments:
I already feel some kind of anxiety, when posting a question here. As professional as this site is made, I believe only people that are perfect are welcome here. But I'm no Borg.
Even when asking this question, I felt a strong kind of anxiety. A friend of mine, basically got to talk me into this.
Stack Overflow has a problem. I cannot describe it in detail, but I believe that this blog post points out some of the problems (and the comments on this blog post speak for themselves). Stack Exchange wants to focus on getting new users (as pointed out in one answer), while the long term community wants to feel valued (see the linked question). There is nothing inherently flawed about getting both things to work, yet they seem to work against each other.
Anyone can rise to become an expert in a topic. Sometimes we need help, and sometimes we want to help. But to really become an expert, we need feedback. Every single one of us.
If you want to increase the quality of questions, then provide some feedback. Why is this question bad? What can you do, to make it better? Do not make them feel like delicate little flowers, but do not make them feel like they are not worth your time and should go into a corner and shame themselves either. If a question is badly worded, why not recommend to make its wording better? If a question seems like a duplicate, why not ask them if the question has already been answered before?
Coming down as the judge and the executioner without saying anything makes people feel worthless. The quality of the questions will not increase of said person; they will go away from asking any more questions. But you will also feel bad, because there is yet another bad question.
Maybe some tools will help. For example:
Upvoting high-quality questions
This would give a reference to new users, what is good and what is not. Even though, up- and downvotes have a specific meaning (on answers: "This answer is useful" / "This answer is not useful" and on questions: "This question shows research effort; it is useful and clear" / "This question does not show any research effort; it is unclear and not useful"), from what I see, they have succumb to "like" / "dislike". Without a reason, this is fast and easy to do, way faster than to flag an answer/question.
It could contain a check-list (or a text-field) to require the "quality-downvoters" to specify their problem with this question. Since this is not a feature request, I don't want to go into detail, but the result may just be what everybody wants. Over time, we get better questions/answers and build up a good climate for everyone.
If this is not your bread, how about forcing voters to say why they up-/downvoted the way they did? This would allow the one getting downvoted to see why he was downvoted and help him better himself.
Conclusion
As I started here, my first questions were bad (I believe). One question got downvoted three times. But till this day, I do not know why. It appears that this question was not answered before. I do not know that. Sure, I do not need to know that now, but how should I improve my next question after that, if I do not know what was bad about this question?
Since then I (apparently) improved my question, yet I still don't know why. I got lucky and found nice people that still tried to help me. But others have no such luck.
Some people will always spread hate. On that note: I have to disagree with Jay Hanlon in his blog post (on some points). It has nothing to do with specific groups of people hating other specific groups of people. It is all of us. The long term community is getting frustrated and new people don't want to stay. This helps no one.
In this manner, thank you for your time and have a nice day.
the high quality so many users clamor for
to the top of question searches in some way. Maybe create some sort of scoring heuristic for quality (much like google search does) and add a new sorting criteria for questions that uses that heuristic. Start in alpha by simply evaluating the heuristic on existing questions to determine whether it's effective or not.@somebody
they will be notified, and (2) If you're the OP, comment on the question and there is only 1 other commenter they get notified automatically.