I think it depends upon your perspective, which is almost completely constructed by the tags that interest you. I started in c, which is notorious for doubling as an indicator that a new CS semester started somewhere by an influx of pointer-arithmetic questions.
However, a lot of interesting stuff was going on in c# because the author of one of the most popular books was answering questions, and folks that initially followed Jeff and Joel tended to gravitate toward Microsoft technologies.
Yet, when php took root and someone asked "what does headers already sent by ..." for the millionth time, Jeff compared it to, well, some not-so-nice things on Twitter.
c++ was so fed up with off-by-one bugs and people that honestly didn't understand even the basics of the language, that they fought vehemently to allow recommended book lists on the site so they had somewhere to point people that vastly underestimated the amount of work the task ahead of them was going to need in order to be accomplished competently.
This was all in the first couple of years. Heck, some of it in the first few months.
The system worked, and works. Canonical questions surfaced, duplicates were a challenge but not impossible to handle efficiently, and the biggest problem that weighed on people's minds was more the decline in the quality of writing than the usefulness of any given question.
Fast forward and our volume has increased by over tenfold. As Jon indicates, almost any question that isn't about a specific problem in someone's code is probably a duplicate, unless it's dealing with a new technology. Wikipedia is facing this in more pronounced ways.
Even questions about when one might argue with the intermediate output of their compiler (almost always guaranteed to get a good reception!) were dwindling, because compilers kept getting better. Interesting problems also sort of need to be still relevant in some way in order for folks to accept them as useful.
Initially, anything related to mobile development was more or less a wasteland on the site because even the vendors didn't know what they were talking about. That led some to make some pretty dire predictions about how we'd do in the future, but .. it mostly leveled out. Most new questions about a mobile app still revolve around someone not being able to make UX/Navigation work as expected, but, that's a big part of what those programmers do every day.
Therein lies the pattern, really.
Are you more into Python? Do you like nostalgic trips into some of the older mainframe stuff? Are you one of the folks that sees the potential for elegance in the myriad of ways one can implement inversion of control using PHP? You'll probably have a different outlook than I did, when I explained what undefined behavior meant for the hundredth time.
It's honestly way too big these days to measure without saying who's asking? Users find value in most posts written on any given day:
And more than a tiny bit of those upvotes go to great answers on not-so-great questions. I won't pretend that uninteresting, repetitive questions aren't a problem, and I won't pretend that the scale that they come in these days doesn't put new urgency into the need to innovate and give users better tools to find duplicates, but those are good problems to have, and we're working on them.
Mostly, if you come to the site and show that you care about getting an answer as much as you'd hope we care about writing one, you'll get what you need. Our scale makes that not as simple as it used to be, and frustration tends to be commensurate with that, but we deal with problems as they come up. Some are just much harder and take a lot longer.
I don't think we have anything to worry about as long as we stay honest about what we see, and listen to what people tell us.
But the tl;dr - yeah, it has always been that way from my perspective, someone else might disagree :)