Is it recommended to have a separate account to ask questions, because low-level questions might reflect negatively on your public image?
I don't think it is ever recommended to have a separate account, regardless of reason. I certainly don't think that people who answer a large number of questions and garner a lot of reputation from those answers are concerned at all about the possibility of a question they ask reflecting poorly on them.
If anything, such a person, having had to deal with a great many questions that are poorly formed, incomplete, or just outright incomprehensible, knows first-hand just how important a good question is, and will take the time to compose their questions well. Their questions will reflect positively on them, regardless of what "level" of question they are, because the person will have presented their question in a clear, useful way.
I believe it is unlikely that a person will never have the need to ask how new things work
Which person?
I agree with your belief in general. But it is certainly an achievable goal that some people will never have the need to ask how new things work. It is unfortunate with so much detailed, technical information that we still have so many people who don't seem able or inclined to find it.
IMHO, a big component missing from the educational systems of many cultures (not the least being the US, where I reside) is teaching self-sufficiency and good research skills. Granted, this is harder to teach than rote knowledge, but the benefits are exponentially greater. Research skills in particular have unique needs in today's environment of the Internet; knowing not just what words to type in a search query, but also how to efficiently and quickly sort through the results, and to adapt to the specifics of differing search engines, these are important skills that not everyone has.
For the person who does have these skills, they may very well not need to ask another individual how things work.
For what it's worth, one of the biggest reasons I got involved with Stack Overflow is for the learning experience. I know from my own past experience two things:
- I learn best by teaching others, and find the process enjoyable (most of the time).
- I am more skilled at using various Internet search engines than many other people.
I also suspect that I am more willing to put in effort to find things, but this is more a subjective measure and not as useful a consideration to bring up.
So, sure…I answer a lot more questions than I ask. Indeed, many of the questions I answer, I did not know the answer before I saw the question. Especially early on, when I was spending more active time using Stack Overflow as a learning tool, I very often would search for questions to which I did not know the answer but had a strong suspicion that I would be able to find the answer easily. In doing so, I would learn something new (of course, I targeted my search for questions in the areas where I wanted to learn something new).
Sometimes, this meant the answer was on Stack Overflow and I could just vote to close the question as a duplicate. Other times the answer was somewhere else, or required the integration of multiple sources. In those cases, I would respond with an answer. An answer that the OP could have found themselves, if only they'd taken the time, and/or had the research skills.
Your question seems to imply that people who don't ask questions are embarrassed to do so, and either refrain or use a separate account so that they don't have to admit that they are asking questions.
I submit an alternative hypothesis:
There is a strong correlation between being able to answer questions and being able to find answers independently. The type of person who asks a lot of questions (thus gaining reputation that way) is often the type of person who does not have the skill or inclination to find answers on their own, and so will not wind up answering a lot of questions. Conversely, the person who answers a lot of questions does have that skill or inclination, and so does not need to ask a lot of questions.
It is not surprising at all that high-rep users may not ask a lot of questions. In fact, I suspect that an analysis of user reputation would show very few users whose reputation is sourced in a balanced way from both questions and answers. Some such users surely exist, but on the whole the Internet really does seem to be split down the middle between people who know how to get answers on their own and those who don't.
Accumulating Points as Career Strategy?
probably has to do with it because it seems to imply that SO "power users" amass reputation to build a career. (You may not have meant to say that but that's what it sounds like.)but I believe that they have a certain "reputation" that they might want to protect.
I see what you mean but I don't think people like Jon Skeet have a secondary account - nor would their "reputation" be tarnished by displaying ignorance in a certain field. I can say I don't have one, either (apart from a sock puppet for occasional trolling)