SE's design and moderation strategy avoids many of the pitfalls and failures of other sites.
It is more efficient for me to look for information on SO than other sites, and I feel like I can improve content sometimes when I find problems.
In my opinion Jeff and Joel had a lot of good ideas. SE and SO can encourage high quality and up to date answers (other times it gives us +1000/-100 scored wrong answers on high visibility questions, but I won't go into that here).
Here are some of the things that keep me coming back:
Posts can be commented on
Most of the time comments sections on other sites are rather poor; they might only allow comments for a week after the information is posted, or nobody uses comments even when the content has serious issues.
I would say the most important use of comments is to warn users of problems with answers. There's been many times I've found useless, misleading, or even harmful content on other sites, but there was nothing I could do to help others who stumbled onto the page.
As a reader I always read all the comments and I had a much richer experience because of what I found; I've found many useful references, and avoided many mistakes. In a perfect world most of this would be edited into the post, but unfortunately this rarely happens from my experience (it's still better than the information not being there, though!).
I also like leaving comments to reference other posts, or other resources I've found; it helps future me (if I revisit the topic) and I hope it also helps out future visitors. It's a small thing, but it's an easy way to contribute while I'm researching something.
Old questions can be answered
If I find a question in my Google searching that isn't answered, or isn't answered very well, I can add my own answer even if the post is many years old.
A lot of sites "lock" questions after they receive an answer, which means Google will show these sites in search results even if the content there hasn't been maintained since the OP got their answer.
Content that can't be preserved is generally discouraged
If you look elsewhere on the Internet (e.g., with OpenGL programming), there are a lot of replies on forums that aren't very useful.
For example, all of these types of answers just waste my time when searching:
- Link-only posts to sites that aren't archived
- Posts that just say "Google [some topic]" (doesn't help if Google results change)
- Posts that say "Go on John Smith's Blog" (what is the URL? I can't even archive.org that)
Unfortunately content like that is very common on non-SE sites.
Useful tag wikis
I think tag wikis are a very underrated feature of SE. I have found useful references and unbiased, up to date information that would have taken several SE questions or several different blog posts to find. Official documentation will very rarely acknowledge third party, unofficial sites, but tag wikis pull in pages from all over the internet, which makes them more interesting and useful.
SE generally doesn't intentionally make my browsing experience worse
SE has been doing a bit worse on this lately, but it's still far better than sites with:
- Paywalled bait and switch content (a promising Google search result followed by "members only")
- Auto-playing video
- Sponsored "related" content that isn't actually related
- SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER!!! popups that show up one second after I visit the page for the first time,
- INSTALL OUR APP!!! buttons that hide 1/4 of my phone screen
SE is less likely to have (unrecoverable) link rot than other sites
Some sites like to change their entire URL scheme every year, but SE has resisted that urge and because of that, I can generally count on a post being there even years later. Even if the post gets deleted I can find it using archive.org, or worst case scenario, SEDE.
Companies go out of business, mergers happen, or Microsoft mysteriously makes every single page redirect to a generic "Windows" landing page with no indication whatsoever that it wasn't always that way (!), but SO has generally been very stable, more so than the official sources most of the time.
For me, SE sometimes acts like a more permanent reference than most of the Internet. It's stable because there's a complete revision history on every post and it's generally predictable.
Less copy/paste content than other sites
One issue I run into a lot is, when I search for something especially obscure, I tend to find multiple blogs that just directly quoted the exact same source, which pollutes my search results. I would guess that this happens when there is a "new hot trend" that many authors want to cover and they were all very impressed by some new language feature or something.
SE questions that ask about the same thing tend to be marked as duplicates. I have found false positives and negatives for duplicates over the years, but the system is working for the most part. Also a "possible duplicate of" comment on an open question helps even if the vote doesn't go through; I check the linked post.
Duplicate or near-duplicate answers happen somewhat frequently on SE, but I find duplicate answers to be far easier to filter out than reading the 10th filler-y blog post only to find that the part I'm really interested in is the same section copy/pasted from the 9th blog.
This also happens with books, which is even more irritating, because I paid money for the book based on a limited amazon preview, only to find that the part I hoped would go into more detail is just a near copy/paste of the man pages!
Any post can be edited (eventually)
The suggested edit system is very flawed and doesn't scale, but it's far better than nothing.
If something very bad happens like somebody's personal blog gets replaced with malware links, I, or somebody else can flag it and it can be fixed. This gives me confidence that SO is a bit safer than other sites I read.
I also encounter a lot of pages on the Internet with utterly broken formatting. I'd guess it's because they used a layout scheme that didn't age well or something. SE doesn't have that problem, and stuff like that gets edited out usually.
No helpdesk script answers
This is more related to sites like Super User, but I figure I'll put this here,
If you browse some sites (e.g., some Microsoft Q/A sites) there is seemingly always at least one answer telling you something like "try rebooting your computer" or "reinstall Windows", which are pretty much never useful. To make things worse they are usually forcibly accepted by the answerer, useful or not.
No blatant self-promotion answers
Other sites have answers that promote a library, or some framework and provide no other solutions. Or they fail to mention what the limitations of the library are. I am generally very skeptical when browsing a company's blog, and I always try and find at least a couple of sources before making a decision.
Also, some other sites have a lot of content that seems to be more of a publicity thing for the author. Content that exists for the sole purpose of demonstrating what the author knows or has experienced aren't completely useless, but they can have a lot of fluff in them at times (and they read like a sales brochure which gets tiring).
No sign-in required to view content
Many sites require you to sign in to download code. This is usually just a minor inconvenience thanks to throwaway e-mail accounts, but it is nice that SO doesn't require that.
All information is text based
Sometimes I'm googling something and I find a result that seems helpful, but it's buried somewhere in a very long video; SE posts are always text that I can scan quickly.
Note: This is my first meta post, but I'm not new to either meta or SO. Please disregard the "New Contributor" thing.