I wanted to chime in and try to answer some of the questions being asked, as well as ensure everybody that my goal is not to harm the quality of information on Stack Overflow in any way - I've been a long-time user/contributor/moderator, and have only the best intentions.
A lot of questions that would be appropriate for a support site are not appropriate for SO.
Possibly, but the Web Development forum that we decided to close should not provide too many instances of this. In the announcement I shared a link to the Stack Overflow tour; my expectation is that people coming to Stack Overflow will learn, and play by, the Stack Overflow rules. We've seen enormous success here keeping discussion/hashing in the comments, and solutions in the answers. I don't expect this to be a problem for engineers coming from MSDN.
Is this an official partnership?
While we have official relationships with Stack Overflow (we sponsor the Internet Explorer tag, for instance) this particular gesture was unrelated to any official partnership. We simply went the way many before us have gone, including the YouTube API, Windows Azure, OneDrive Development, etc.
...can someone 'reach out' to Microsoft and suggest that they might want to clarify what types of questions should be asked on SO, rather than inviting all questions be asked.
We aren't inviting all questions; we specifically chose the "Web Development" forum as our target. The questions asked therein will be web-development related. If they're not, they'll be handled appropriately by the Stack Overflow community.
Am I tripping? Seriously, one of the largest software companies in the world is pointing its customers who want support to an external website that it doesn't control?
You're not tripping. We also host code on GitHub, open-source many products, contribute to open-source projects, file bugs for competing browsers, and more ;)
Dear Jonathan Sampson: can you please not...
Why would you not want more developers contributing to the general body of knowledge here on Stack Overflow? Seemed like a good idea to me.
I read the blog post. Seems like they understand the ethos. It remains to be seen if they do keep up with related tags.
We do understand the distinctions between the two communities. In fact, for anybody on my team that wants to brush up on Stack Overflow, I'm going to personally deliver a training internally on it next week. Our goal is to contribute positive effort into this community - I will personally be involved from here on out.
I wonder if it might be better to have a new dedicated network site for this in the long run.
I don't think this would be a good idea. The forum we are closing is the Web Development in Internet Explorer forum. The types of questions asked in there are already being asked on Stack Overflow. By closing the MSDN forum we reduce the redundancy on the web, and encourage a community of very talented engineers to contribute to an even superior platform - Stack Overflow.
I think having the Internet Explorer team monitoring questions/answers and providing their expert advice/answers is a benefit to the community.
I do too - our team has a deep and intimate working knowledge of not only our browser, but browsers and web-standards in general.
As an example, I happened upon a cross-browser interop bug yesterday on Stack Overflow and proceeded to reduce it to a fiddle that I could share with a team member. Within seconds of looking at the fiddle, the team member identified exactly what the root of the cause was, noted that it was a regression, stated the difference between how we do it and how Chrome does it, and suggested a simple work-around. That is not the type of knowledge you'll find with your average web-developer, but it is the type of information you can expect from browser-engineers themselves.
I am excited about seeing fewer "Ugh. IE. FML." responses, and more responses from people who have an intimate working knowledge of what is actually happening, and can give a real solution to obscure problems.