That article is frequently quoted on Reddit. I'll paste my reply to it as well:
The classical Stack Overflow circlejerk is very present here, as is
tradition with posted blogs that talk about that site:
- I found a question that I also have, but it's been closed!
- I found a question that I also have, but it's closed as a duplicate that doesn't help me!
- I found a question that asks how to do X, and they answered[sic] "Why do you want to do that? The normal way to do that is Y!".
- The moderators[sic] who close questions are power tripping jerks!
- Noobs have the right to get answers too, and they should be treated more friendly because they don't know better!
- I find "[What is the best|Give me a list of] X" a very useful question, but they don't!
- It's all about the process for them autists, not the results that matter!
- I tried to ask a question once, but it was downvoted! I'll never come back.
With the usual zero links to evidence.
If you make such claims, that could mean that you don't understand the
scope of the site. It is not a forum to help anyone to learn to
program, it's a repository of clear, concise, unique questions whose
answers help many others, asked and answered by professional or
enthusiast programmers.
It is hard to ask a good question, even harder when you're
inexperienced. The "How do I ask a good
question?" page however is
not that long, and contains plenty of reading material that can even
help you solve your own problem, or ultimately, ask a question that
falls within the scope of what is allowed.