Those of us who have been here for any significant length of time know all about Stack Overflow's struggle with quality.
When the Documentation beta first came out, I didn't really have much interest. I honestly thought that Documentation would become just another recycle bin. Consequently, I haven't really followed the Beta much.
But a couple of weeks ago, I trolled through a few articles. Boy, was I wrong about Documentation. The material there is spectacular; not only is it well-written and accurate, but it seems to hit the sweet spot of "material that is interesting because you can't really find similar material elsewhere on the internet, or in official documentation."
How did this happen?
More importantly, can it be sustained? What made the difference, and can that difference be preserved over the long haul?
Note: This isn't a criticism of Stack Overflow. Quite the opposite. There isn't a week that goes by that I don't find a useful answer to some problem there. But a repository of useful programming information is one of its stated goals, and there are clearly some weaknesses in this area.