First off, I fully agree with the observations made in the blog post. We have many ways of telling people that their question is bad (downvotes, close, deletion, as well as comments or even edits). We also have a couple to show the opposite (upvotes, stars, and of course useful answers) but you rarely get a mix of both.
I am also very glad that we got some official recognition of "people are scared by SO" not being the same as "our community/users fail to be welcoming", which appears to have been the conclusion previously.
It's been on my mind to suggest a change to the voting system, and this might be a good opportunity. In my opinion, we should focus on the users that are trying to ask good questions but fail to do so (rather than those who put in no effort in the first place). They will have optimized their question in the aspects that they understood to matter (e.g. described the problem, researched, added tags), but there are a lot of aspects to consider and people are encouraged to downvote if any of them is incomplete - which is likely the case for questions asked by new users (e.g. insufficient [mcve]).
Let's look at the current tooltips for the up- and downvotes:
This question shows research effort; it is useful and clear
This question does not show any research effort; it is unclear or not useful.
There are already three criteria mentioned here. What should I do if one of those three is insufficiently addressed in the question? According to the particular choice of "and" and "or", I should downvote unless all of them are good.
This makes for a terrible learning experience - you did your best and all you get is an indiscriminate -1 from lots of people because there's something you missed. Yes, there are comments to give more detailed feedback, but it doesn't change the inherent negativity of getting downvoted (see again the blog post). It can also be a tough call for the voter - if a post clearly has effort in it but falls short on one criterion, do you downvote?
I think the experience could be improved significantly if each aspect could be voted on separately (which could be aggregated into an overall score).
As a start, one could directly translate the three aspects mentioned in the current tooltips:
/\ The question is clear
Clarity
\/ The question is unclear
/\ This question can help future readers
Usefulness
\/ This question is of no use to future readers
/\ This question shows appropriate research effort
Researched
\/ This question lacks appropriate research effort
This provides actionable feedback for the asker - they are directly made aware of whatever aspect they neglected (which would currently require comments or close votes). More importantly, it gives the opportunity to give positive feedback even for questions that don't fully meet our mark, which is currently 100% absent (or rather relies on the variance in individual voting preferences).
It's not a fully fleshed-out idea yet, but maybe this is something to consider when an "overhaul" is on the horizon.
There are most likely several other aspects one could include and add or dock points for (e.g. for [mcve]?). Also, the different close reasons overlap with this - merging these systems would reduce the UI estate that is used to "scold" the asker (as lamented in the "contentious" picture). Enough people downvoted for "not enough research effort" and provided a duplicate? Close as a duplicate with little noise. But this is not the primary objective here - different axes of feedback (some of which can be positive even for lackluster questions) is.