I'm not sure about the motivation behind creating the SODocs project. But I'm personally very disappointed by it. If you are looking for the solution to a very specific problem, Stack Overflow is your friend, but if you're a complete beginner, you're better off using a documentation authored by a fewer number of people in an organized manner. SODocs lacks comprehensiveness and continuity.
Documentation is generally written in a traditional book-form, with a hierarchy of topics and mostly linear dependencies between them. While in SODocs, there is a complete lack of any dependency-threads that one can follow, and categories are restricted to being just one-level deep. Here's a very related discussion about this.
One important argument against using hierarchies is the question of how to determine the hierarchy when there is a lot of contention and conflicting proposals.
A second argument is claiming that people look for documentation by googling it! That argument is baffling, because the purpose of documentation is to teach you about things you don't know exist. How would I google for something I don't even know about?! What SODocs terribly lacks as of now is discoverability of the unknown.
One proposal that I can think of which kind of solves this problem is to keep examples independent, and to have multiple organizational structures be maintained at the same time. That is, anyone can propose a structure to organize them with, and others can vote on it and propose edits which must be accepted by the one who created it.
The default view may use a weighted combination of two or more highest scoring hierarchies (how to combine?) to show a rich view of the general consensus of structuring. The view should preferably be graphical (showing (weighted?) dependency links) and interactive (ability to collect directly connected topics of a given topic in one place), while being comfortably readable (not flashy).
I know I just hand-waved through a lot of complexities, but the status quo is quite lacking.