I'm opposed to the idea of anonymising questions. To address your two objectives:
Encourage people to ask more questions without thinking too much about what others might think of them (Especially colleagues from workplace, managers, confidentiality concerns.)
I think that this is actively counter-productive. In my opinion, people asking question on SO should think about what others think of them; it might make them less likely to ask lazy questions they could and should be answering for themselves, or put more effort into reading and following the guidance. It's not like there's any kind of question shortage on SO; what we want to encourage is high quality content, which in my view tends to come from people who want to be taken seriously.
And I'm not sure which way you're looking at confidentiality concerns; if you mean it allows users to share information they wouldn't be able to share under their own names, they shouldn't be doing that either way.
Avoid some 'discrimination' related to reputation. (Rarely, good questions get ignored or downvoted just because the user has very low reputation or because he's just new).
This is not my experience. Rather, I would say that new users are more likely to ask questions that do not meet SO's standards (partly because they are new, but there is plenty of help material many of them simply don't bother to read) whereas higher rep users know how the site works - this is correlation, not causation.