After reading Sympathetic up-votes, it reminded me a bit of Why is Stack Overflow so negative of late? (I'm in group 4) as well. Reflecting on the second question in the post on sympathetic up-votes brought about this question. Perhaps my Google skills are failing me (again) and it is obviously posted somewhere... but I can't seem to find it. What is Stack Overflow's goal / purpose / mission statement?
My Personal Thoughts
To me, this site is about helping people. The talk about people going crazy for imaginary points is anything but crazy. To me, the points are a reflection of how much I've helped someone. If I have an answer with 30 upvotes, I'm not excited about the points. I'm excited about the fact that 30 people consider my post helpful. That's what makes me feel good and that is why I bother answering a question. Because I think it is helping someone. I feel the same way about asking questions. I like the fact that my question helped someone solve their problem.
From https://stackoverflow.com/tour
With your help, we're working together to build a library of detailed, high-quality answers to every question about programming.
This reads to me like we are building an archive of questions and answers. While this is obvious, I don't necessarily see that as the primary purpose. I see it as a means to help people. That is, we are making this list so that other users can see those answers.
If the goal is to build that library of detailed answers to every question about programming or just to help people (or both), then why is this post such a "low-quality" question? This question's list of "Related" questions shows no exact duplicates. For a new programmer, this is a very hard problem to solve and a very hard problem to ask. Think about when you were just starting and had a programming problem. You knew what you needed, but you didn't know the terminology to best ask the question. This user may have been undecided on whether they want to learn how to program. And the community response to his question may have very well turned them off completely.
I see a lot of people complaining about the noise-to-signal ratio. That is, people watch the new questions lists for good questions to answer. This seems like a pointless argument to me. I like intriguing questions. But that doesn't mean I expect every question to be intriguing. In fact, the more questions I've answered, the less likely those questions will come about.
Group 1 users, why does it matter if someone posts a question and doesn't care about the site? The first time most people visit a website, they couldn't care less. And why would they? They have yet to receive any real benefit from the site.
It seems counterintuitive to me to have such an inviting website where people can ask questions without even registering and when they do, they instantly get ridiculed by people simply because the question wasn't the great question they wanted. Then I hear people complaining about the next generation of programmers not being worthy enough. They don't care, and they can't be bothered to look for the information. When I was nine years old (I'm 26 now) and started programming, the Internet was a little bit bare with regard to programming. But there were people out there who encouraged me to continue. I don't see that any more.
I see a lot of people complaining about the noise to signal ratio. IE that people watch the new questions lists for good questions to answer. This seems like a pointless argument to me. I like intriguing questions. But that doesn't mean I expect every question to be intriguing. In fact, the more questions I've answered, the less likely those questions will come about.
You might change your perspective once you hit 10-20k reputation. Or maybe not. Some high-rep users (who I shall not name) have been very active recently answering any and all questions, regardless of quality.