I have noticed that sometimes people jump the gun on closing something as duplicate when it is not a duplicate. They reference answers that are 10 years old, relating to "legacy" technology. While questions may seem duplicated, a 10 year old answer without giving time for perspective doesn't provide the best answer. So, there should be more characteristics considered prior to closing something as duplicate; such as,
Does the old answer allow for fresh perspective?
Does the old answer reference technology that doesn't actually exist?
Does the old answer reference specific technology that the new question does not reference?
How much time has passed since the question was asked?
So, I'm recommending two things:
A waiting period before closing something as a duplicate. Sometimes questions are closed as duplicate within minutes. At least wait "x" amount of time prior to closing something as a duplicate.
If a post is 10 years old, and a new question is a duplicate, leave the new question open, and close the 10 year old answer as a duplicate. You may get new perspective on the fresh question, rather than referencing well dated questions and solutions.
Those two things would help keep it fresh in my opinion as Stack Overflow continues into the future in keeping up with modern thoughts and perspectives. Not giving time for a conversation, and using 10 year old answers may not keep people interested in those specific answers.
php
tag closed a question extremely quickly yesterday and I asked how they even knew where to look and they replied saying they had memorised the question ID because of the frequency that it was linked. A time based delay wouldn't necessarily prevent a dupe from being marked as a dupe, it'd just delay the inevitable. – Script47 Mar 27 at 13:26