IMHO many of those questions are by folks who are starting out in their coding career and they genuinely want to know the answer. We slam the door shut in their face. Hardly likely to engender loyalty or future good will.
If the user is just starting out, Stack Overflow is just not the right place to visit. There are hundreds of places on the internet to learn about programming. But Stack Overflow is trying to be something different; It is trying to be a high-quality Q/A site for specific programming questions, and it must set rules and have standards to maintain this quality.
Because of these standards and rules, some questions are going to be turned down, closed, and deleted. And that is OK. Certain questions just do not work well in a Q&A format, and that is something we all have to accept if we want to contribute here.
Users naturally churn. SO's monetization by banner ads and job ads will suffer in the future if the audience is not replenished. Sure, SO is the majority of first-page hits on many code-related searches, but that just makes people takers and not contributors. SO should be trying to broaden the user base and encourage users to visit on a regular basis - not just when they have a problem.
True, we'd all want more contributors, but we also want to have good contributors. We'd love to have more contributors, but if those contributors are hurting the site's quality, they are part of the problem.
Part of being a good contributor is following the rules of the community you participate in. If you don't want to, then you simply should not participate.
But also think about the flip side of this. What happens if we do allow any kind of content to be posted here? Sure we will please some users, but what about the users that actually contribute good content? We'll be driving away many good users because of allowing low-quality posts.
Stack Overflow cannot sacrifice quality of users, over quantity of users. Otherwise, we'd be like any other programming forum. Allowing anything and everything, regardless of whether it is detrimental to the site's quality.
The plethora of new tech (I sometimes read a question in the JavaScript topic stream and don't recognise a single library name - or is that just me?) needs some of those 'what is the best library for ...' questions just like some of their ancestors from 10 years ago in the C++ and C# topics.
I understand that, but recommendation questions just don't work well here. These types of questions attract things such as spam, outright bad answers, and many different opinions. In short, they attract bad content.
What would I change? I would spend more time deciding on the merit of the question and whether it can be made more valid with editing. I would hope to see more edits heading off closes.
If the question is simply off-topic, no amount of editing will change that. For an edit to be able to salvage such a question, one would most likely need to completely change the topic. And by then, the question is better of closed as that is not what the OP intended.
I understand where you are coming from, and it would be great if we could have more contributors and have more traffic. But if those changes bring about bad, low-quality content, there only making it harder on us. And the content they leave must be closed and/or deleted.
The entire reason that Stack Overflow is so popular, is because people know they can find high-quality Q&A sessions without scrolling through long threads of useless posts.
As @Braiam has already said, we want to be popular for the right reasons. But if we have to become a little less popular, or lose a little traffic for trying to maintain good quality, then so be it.