In the dystopian future in which all questions have been asked and answered on Stack Overflow, every new question will be closed as an exact duplicate of an existing question. (This assumes, of course, that we figure out a way to incentivize that behavior.) So we can estimate how close we are to saturation by measuring the ratio of otherwise good questions that are closed as duplicates. Our existential risk has increased each of the last 7 years and we are well on our way to yet another increase:
year questions dupes dupe_rate
---- --------- ----- ---------
2008 55347 410 0.74%
2009 337729 2431 0.72%
2010 691701 6636 0.96%
2011 1192282 16063 1.35%
2012 1621485 26562 1.64%
2013 2006560 41549 2.07%
2014 2229369 48971 2.20%
2015 1665499 40157 2.41%
This doesn't quite add up to 10 million because this view doesn't include questions closed for reasons other than being a duplicate. It's also quite likely that the duplication rate will increase in the future even for questions before 2015 as people discover more duplication. However, while we might be getting more than 2.4% of our questions closed as duplicates, we aren't in any real danger of hitting 100%.
However, some tags have matured more than others:
tag N dupes dupe% avg_score deleted deleted% closed closed%
----------- ---- ------ ----- --------- ------- -------- ------ -------
sass 2110 131 6.21 1.01 475 22.51 212 10.05
c 181169 7461 4.12 1.12 29258 16.15 25993 14.35
c++ 445750 17788 3.99 1.61 73827 16.56 61354 13.76
r 114421 4223 3.69 1.35 18919 16.53 12665 11.07
php 956392 30834 3.22 0.41 204317 21.36 143504 15
jsf 17888 576 3.22 0.8 3629 20.29 1009 5.64
c++11 1694 53 3.13 1.07 284 16.77 129 7.62
java 1125545 33909 3.01 1.06 217949 19.36 143140 12.72
python 526526 15245 2.9 1.65 78528 14.91 51593 9.8
javafx 2970 83 2.79 0.43 564 18.99 163 5.49
swift 14097 391 2.77 0.97 2108 14.95 932 6.61
javascript 1060086 28983 2.73 1.13 187398 17.68 97863 9.23
bash 32961 885 2.68 2.61 3272 9.93 2712 8.23
matlab 50808 1288 2.54 0.5 11712 23.05 5875 11.56
objective-c 113674 2874 2.53 1.56 19969 17.57 8350 7.35
delphi 28911 723 2.5 1.95 3870 13.39 2772 9.59
c# 1007001 25046 2.49 1.35 172802 17.16 101813 10.11
git 53232 1285 2.41 7.24 5892 11.07 3170 5.96
With the exception of C++11 and Swift, these technologies were introduced before Stack Overflow launched. (Though plenty of people had questions about C++0x from nearly the beginning of the site.) Newer technologies tend to have lower duplication rates:
rust 1753 38 2.17 2.42 69 3.94 55 3.14
coffeescript 1342 23 1.71 2.19 187 13.93 59 4.4
go 5572 94 1.69 2.19 589 10.57 330 5.92
mongodb 23142 346 1.5 1.33 3550 15.34 1303 5.63
hadoop 16087 36 0.22 0.6 3237 20.12 750 4.66
docker 2685 4 0.15 2.89 231 8.6 66 2.46
So one faint glimmer of hope is that new technologies must be learnt. As you imply, the downside consists in each technology generation needing to build up a corpus of the same basic questions using new syntax. Once someone invents the Esperanto of programming languages and we stop playing with the rest, perhaps we'll finally see the writing on the wall.
If you want to look up your favorite tag's duplicate doomsday number, I've published a Google spreadsheet. For the purposes of these statistics, I'm only looking at the first, or primary, tag. So questions with both c and c++ will be counted as C++ questions, since there are more of those. Not fair? I agree, but it's a pretty good way to eliminate secondary tags such as android-calendar. (It's also expedient in simplifying my query.)