I'm glad you're enjoying the updates! Here's my best attempt to answer your questions:
the point is to reduce the file size and and maybe reuse this css across the other sites?
Yes, reducing our CSS file size is definitely one of our goals. Our primary goal though is to consolidate our UI and UX patterns across Stack Overflow (and the Stack Exchange network). We've accumulated a lot of CSS over the years. Combine that with the launch of new content on SO (Jobs, Teams, Developer Story, Documentation), this problem has only compounded. Keeping styles in sync across teams and products has become extremely hard, if not impossible. For last 6-8 weeks we've started to actively build an internal Pattern Library which will serve as an internal UI and UX documentation guide. By consolidating various highly-specific (but redundant) patterns, we'll be able to reduce our CSS specificity and file size, while creating a more consistent experience.
As we update these various items, we'll roll them out. The recent color update is an example of that. We finally standardized on a set of established color variables and we rolled them out.
I was curious why the other sites do not have these same changes, has the global rollout not yet hit and this is why?
Most of the updates we've made so far have been across the network. We've updated things buttons and post-tags so that they all have similar hover, active, and disabled behaviors across all communities. This is slow work though. Because of the way the CSS was implemented previously, we need to hand-check every community before we roll out an update.
Our primary focus with the updates right now is with Stack Overflow, but many of the elements on Stack Overflow are on every Stack Exchange community website. So the communities should be updated as we update Stack Overflow. If your question is more in reference to why we haven't rolled out the new answered and accepted-answer styles, this is considered an SO-only modification at the moment. We could roll this change out across the network (and make it the standard style for the questions list). Unfortunately we wouldn't be able to do this until a later time.
Thank you for your patience.
