TL;DR
The premise of your question is that really good questions aren't getting answered, and your numbers are really high. To me, that's a rather troubling claim, and one that I felt was worthy of additional attention.
So I took the time to look at your queries and try to understand what's going on. While it is certainly true that some decent questions slip through the cracks and don't get an answer, it would appear to be a far more exceptional case than your numbers suggest. Also, there are many tools already available to the question asker and the question seeker to find one another. A "recommended" tab looks to me like a noisy and potentially obnoxious solution to a rather rare problem that already has several solutions (including the ultimate pinnacle of solutions: a self-answer).
Breaking Down Those Numbers
Those numbers are pretty compelling, but they don't really stand up to close scrutiny.
First, as regards your 2 million... you are counting all questions that have 0 answers. This would include questions where the answer was given in a comment (which is pretty common... one of my own, for example), questions that were closed before an answer was offered, questions that were downvoted into oblivion and questions that were abandoned (no edits were ever made). If we filter those questions out, we get less than 180,000 (a reduction of more than 90%).
If we apply the same filter to some of your other numbers, they are reduced by about the same amount:
725,000 with less than 50 views becomes 72,000
1.5 million with less than 50 views and no accepted answer becomes 186,000
Stack Overflow automatically removes unanswered questions after a certain period of time, so it's probably more helpful to restrict our timeframe so that we understand these numbers. Let's look only at 2017:
72,000 with less than 50 views becomes 58,700
Putting Those Numbers in Context
Now, that still sounds like a pretty big number, so let's put that in context. We'll compare that number against all questions in 2017 that got at least one answer:
Answered questions with the same criteria (< 50 views, etc): 260,000
All answered questions: > 1.7 million
So, if we count all questions that were answered in 2017, the ratio of answered to "quietly ignored" (no answer, no comment, no edit, < 50 views) is about 30:1, or less than 3.5% (which, following the pattern, is an order of magnitude less than your claimed 40%).
If we are super generous and say that all of these questions were high caliber, then yeah... maybe you're on to something. 30:1 might be a troubling ratio. But we haven't actually established that yet. We've only established that for every 30 questions with an answer, there's going to be 1 question that doesn't get much immediate attention (sometimes answers arrive many, many months later). But why is that 1 question ignored?
Examining the Candidates Individually
I don't have time to comb through 58k questions, so I'm going to take a random-ish sample and give each of them the once-over. Of course, the relative quality of these questions is going to depend on the reader. My opinion will be different from others... but we are looking for really stellar questions that have been overlooked, questions that undeniably should have been answered and would be if only a few more people would have seen them.
How to load all activerecord associations for Tire::Results::Collection
The OP appears to already have a solution, and is just looking for a "more elegant way"
what kind of result of Google API Pagespeedonline response?
The OP wants to know how one of Google's tools is calculating the size of a request file. That's it. The OP doesn't share how this is relevant to anything he or she is working on. So... if you are a Google product engineer... now's your moment.
Print Preview of HTML text is different to source (writing-mode setting)
The OP answered their own question in the question body.
Make component variables available trancluded HTML
The OP is asking a very dense question, one which leaves me baffled. What does "transcluded" mean? More than that, this is a "tell me how to accomplish some very niche and extremely complicated thing" rather than a "here's a specific problem that can be answered in a reasonable amount of time", so no surprise no one wanted to take it on.
How to avoid duplicates when storing new objects in a database?
This should probably be closed as too broad... with extreme prejudice.
How can I return the JSONArray response using the function below?
Wall of code. These kinds of questions are difficult to penetrate... there's just too much code to sift through, and the end result is only going to be useful to the OP. Personally, I'd take one look and walk away.
VB type Error with Graphics
The OP messed up their build. This question isn't answerable without access to their source code. It should probably be closed, but no one even bothered to flag it (or not enough people flagged it, so the close votes expired).
Why are different query plans generated for partial and full tsvector indices?
This question is going to require a Postgres genius. It really digs deep into the bowels of the database, and the OP seems to have no motivation other than curiosity. Even if I were capable of answering the question, I probably wouldn't as the answer is almost certainly extremely long and heavy on theory. It'd be a rare soul that would consider this worth the effort.
So, of the 8 I've randomly selected, I see 4 that are either unanswerable or were answered by the OP (2, 3, 5, 7) and 2 that are poorly written (4, 6). Which leaves 2 questions (1, 8) that were decent, but are difficult to answer and the OP appears to have little urgency or need. So we'll be generous and say that the ratio of high quality to low quality unanswered questions is about 1:3, which changes our 30:1 ratio to 120:1, or about 0.8%, which is two orders of magnitude less than your 40%.
Final Analysis
So far, I'd say that Stack Overflow is actually doing extremely well at getting questions answered, or at least generating some activity on them. (Note that an "answer" doesn't mean that the OP was satisfied with the answer, but that's a very difficult metric to measure.)
That said, I could see some justification for a feature allowing users to find unanswered questions with low views that are, say, more than 6 months old. Except you can already do that.
The other piece to the puzzle... an AI that attempts to match you with a question you can answer, sounds fascinating, but it also sounds like one of those "AI is magic and can do anything" solutions. It might be more achievable and reasonable to let users create very specific filters so they can find exactly the kind of question that they want to answer.... which is also already possible
So while I agree that it's really annoying to write a question and not get any answers for a long time (believe me, I know), it seems like it's a relatively rare problem that already has a number of solutions. Forcing "recommended" questions into users faces doesn't guarantee that the answer rate will increase, and honestly I would find something like that annoying and just avoid it.
In regards to your Stack Overflow question (which was the original inspiration and justification for this feature request):
So what I'm asking is this, when you click the Export to Excel button, it checks all of the input tags in each row with the following name attributes: "skating", "shooting", "passing", "puck_control", and "team_play". If a certain row has between 1 & 4 of those radio buttons with the listed name attributes selected, a appears with the list of the data-id's (Or the unique title's I've added for each row; whichever is easier.) of the offending rows; if you click Okay it will download the Excel file, otherwise if you click Cancel it will remove the popup and then simply do nothing.
Wait, where's the question? You lead with "So what I'm asking is this", and then fail to actually ask anything.
I already have code for the first part of my question (var checkedItems = row.find(":checked:not(:radio[name='attendance'])") and checkedItems.length), so all you need to do is figure out how to collect a list of all the data-id's or title's that meet the listed criteria and add this info to a simple popup. I haven't been able to find anything that could help me with this so hopefully I can pick your brains to help solve this problem.
Nice to see that you already have code for this first part of your question... but if you already have a solution, then why is it in your question? (A question you've failed to actually ask so far.)
But here's the real issue with your "question":
so all you need to do is figure out how to collect a list of all the data-id's or title's that meet the listed criteria and add this info to a simple popup
It's not a question at all! It's acceptance criteria for a project! Maybe that's why no one is bothering to answer you. As nice as +25 rep might be, there are much more interesting and/or easy questions to answer, depending on the user's motivation.
Maybe if you removed all the unnecessary code (is the CSS really required?) and boiled this down to a more succinct question (that actually asks a question) you would get more answers. Also, "I haven't been able to find anything" is a pretty good giveaway that you probably haven't actually looked very hard. Getting HTML data-* attributes is pretty common and well documented, but the fact that you "haven't found anything" strongly suggests that you haven't tried anything.
title
's of HTML elements. I'm not sure how that's not relevant at all to anybody. Anyways, the main focus is again on the unanswered question problem, not just my own.