I hereby retreat from this feature request. This post handles the same idea, but it is much better.
IMPORTANT: This does NOT mean that all new users should be ignored by everyone or something in this line.
This site is for the experts and this suggestion is to increase the joy of them to use it.
Suggestion
Implement a reputation threshold for each user that then filters the questions seen by the user.A selectbox where I can choose to not see questions of users below a given reputation threshold, say 2/7/10/15/100/1000.
Does the ignore all the new users
Only for those users who chose to ignore them, which I expect not to be the majority. So most people still see all the questions.Then how do new users get reputation points
By answering questions. Or by getting upvotes from other yet-low-rep users.Reasoning
As has been stated in some Questions here recently the amount of low-quality question that drive away experts, but flock in newbies is increasing.For the sake of this suggestion I will categorize the userbase of the answerers into two:
There are users who willingly handle all questions and are fine with them often being junk, handle them and don't care.
Then there are people who get bored/frustrated by all this stupid "has already been asked" stuff and don't want to point out over and over again the same mistakes by beginners.
So, while the former wouldn't need the limit they do need the company of the latter because in this second group are a lot of experts that do answer with all their expertise if they want to. So, this solution would allow the first group to take care of the newcomers while the second group can stay with the difficult problems and are not annoyed by the noise.
Personal
Personally I count myself into the first group on Stack Overflow. I don't mind the stupid questions and look for duplicates before I answer and the like. But I begin to get the subjective impression that the amount of good answers is decreasing. After having read the various questions, answers and comments here I started thinking about how to overcome this.My personal experience in a different community (a game, where I fall into the second category) is that after we blocked out the steady income of newbies into our group, created a stable amount of regulars and only accepted a new one into our ranks once in a while the frustration went away.
The impression I got there is that while the newbies complained about not being let into the upper-ranks-groups they do form new groups that themselves then become elitist. And I think that it is just fine that way, as long as it is possible to raise from the bottom up.
Also I do note that I'm not a very regular answerer myself currently, I do my part on this by working the close vote queue when time permits.
Side notes
This could and most likely will increase the amount of unanswered questions that linger around, unseen. A great place to gain the first reputation for new users.This doesn't solve the problem that we should stop giving incentive to answer bad questions, but that is its own problem.