Today Apple announced the iPhone 6 and the new resolution sizes. I searched Stack Overflow for any knowledge base on the effect the changes will have for developers. There was nothing. However, I did note that the same question was asked regarding the iPhone 5 when it came out and was wildly popular (protected, and #16 of 267,758 ios questions).
I had recently read on Meta that if a question is truly useful then original research to solve the problem is not relevant.
If a question is clear, useful, interesting, well defined and otherwise fits all the criteria we look for in a good question, then it's of no consequence how much effort the OP has or hasn't put into solving their own problem first.
Based on this, I determined that it would be a valuable question to ask the community, and many others would find it useful in the coming months as people start to transition their apps. So I asked the question about dealing with the new iPhone 6 resolutions. It was immediately down-voted, closed and I was flamed ("you should know better", "use your brain", etc). Most comments have since been deleted.
My question is, if this form of question was voted on by the iOS community as not only being relevant, but one of the most valuable questions ever asked, how is it that the iPhone 6 version of the question should be closed and down-voted? If the community as a whole says it's very important in one instance, I just can't see the logic to the opposite response in another instance.