I'm troubled by much of the recent post on the SO blog. Regardless of the various viewpoints on the crux of the post, I think it hit one point that might be an easy win that nearly everyone could gain from. That point is that gratitude ("Thanks", "You helped me too!") isn't something that the current SO design handles well. As is mentioned elsewhere, thanks-only comments add noise and can attract other noise (which makes this one of the few situations in life where a large number of grateful people is actually a problem!)
So embedding thanks into a question is a noisy, and thanks-only comments are also (typically) noisy. However, I think we could change the perceived tone of the SO community in a more welcoming direction for new users and perhaps others with some non-noisy way to express gratitude.
One idea that might work would be to detect comments that are thanks-only, and notify the (presumably new) user that such a comment isn't a great fit for the site but then give them a suggested way to pay it forward. An example of this could be guiding them to a help page about editing posts to improve grammar or fix formatting. A way to sweeten the deal for a newcomer would be to give out a one-time bronze badge for following up on a "pay-it-forward" prompt within X hours or something.
It isn't that Stack Overflow doesn't welcome gratitude. It is that Stack Overflow's very structure relies upon continual good-will, which I argue is often a form of gratitude: Nearly everything done on the site is performed by volunteers that don't get any direct renumeration for their time. Newcomers might not understand this nuance, but without much effort, perhaps we can help them understand it and join without quite as much confusion.