TL;DR: Please, decide a policy, adhere to it and enforce it.
The main problem here is the lack of cohesion about how to deal with the questions. For that I rant about the following:
Yeah, guys, we reached that point (I'm referring to the title of the question "Should we consider unanswered questions a problem yet?", not the content itself). It is a problem. Seems that some people haven't struck home that questions which are low quality need to be downvoted (some may argue that it is optional, but the very same people shouldn't rant about the low quality questions or that the answer rate is so low). Remember that the quality question blocks only works if you downvote/close questions.
What inspired me to make this meta question was this question, which, at the moment that I saw it, had 3 comments each of them with 2 upvotes, so at least 5 (could be more) persons considered that the question was lacking crucial information without a single downvote. The answer is pretty easy, and if the OP had added the relevant information in the first place, it would be highly probable to be closed as duplicated of one of many questions about "Permission denied" errors.
So, since all my rant won't make you feel at easy while downvoting here is the other method; vote to close:
- If the question don't have CRITICAL/BASIC information about the problem, vote "Unclear what you are asking" and leave a comment asking for the information.
- If you're looking at the First post review queue and you are almost sure that there should be another question with the same content, look for it and flag it as duplicate. But, if you didn't find the duplicated or you don't remember, either, ask in [chat] or skip that question.
- If the question is vague enough to make you think "What is this guy talking about" flag it as "Unclear what you are asking" and add a comment. If you don't want to leave the comment, don't press the "No action is needed"!. The only fact that you doubt, makes you unable to take a definitive action, hence Skip the question. If you hit "No action is needed" you are hurting the community!
Now, I will use my super powers to predict some questions:
Are you out of your mind!? You don't know that the Close queue is a mess just with the normal workload? now you want to add that?!
Yes. I'm out of my mind, because I'm using something for what it is supposed to be used. There are enough >3K reputation (active?) users to take care of all the Close Votes needed.
Why flag to close immediately? The comment should be enough no?
Yeah, it should be enough in a pink world with ponies and world peace. But, in the real and crude world, where the users bail out after leaving all the crap behind we need real men/women to take the crap out to react accordingly. If the user is kind enough to provide the information, the question should pass to the Reopen queue, and be approved almost immediately (in fact, that queue is lazy enough, so it needs a bit of work ;)).
Again, aren't we a bit hasty?
Nope. Out 186 question a day, 160 are made by new users, 140 needs more information, 20 gets more information, the rest is crap (this aren't actual values/statistics). Why no deal with the crap while it's still fresh (sounds dirty, no?) instead leaving it get into our backlog and getting bite when we want to take care of it, or we don't want the bother to take care of it now that the problem is serious.
Lets put it in a nice saying:
What is the difference between being hasty and acting quickly? The answer is incredibly simple. It is decided by whether the outcome is successful or not. I took this from a Light Novel, but seems pretty awesome quote.
We are not doing the work as we are supposed to, what is the outcome? We had a clean-up week, where are the results? We have nagged enough, and the results aren't satisfactory.
Stop ranting and make those flags/votes fly! We know how to be kind but strict. Show the ropes to the users, some of them care enough to use them. And improve the quality of AskUbuntu!
Eliah got a glimpse of what I'm trying to do. But let me state clearly: while I made a link to Should we consider unanswered questions a problem yet? the main problem that I want to asset is to keep the crap out of our systems influx of low quality question to the minimum. Which this, I plan to accomplish several (ambitious) objectives:
- Attract new professional answerers.
- Get the ones that stepped down, due the quality of the questions, back.
- Make of AskUbuntu a site where you don't go to ask how to resolve problems, but to find how you solve them.
- Make of AskUbuntu a reference site for the global community.
- That new users will see this as efficient that they will like take part of it, saving the recent view of Ubuntu in general. (yeah, the answer rate help with this)
- Don't commit the same error as UseNet.
There is an advertisement that I remembered while reading jrg♦ comment below that says:
Help us to help you.
That's the message that our actions should deliver to every AU user, and I believe that it wasn't loud enough.
More rant about Eliah answer:
we are not a factory for minimizing unanswered questions
You are absolutely right! What we are is a factory of high quality questions/answers.
Quoting all the "unanswered rate" phrases and sentences
Oddly enough I didn't mention the word "unanswered" in my first revision, and "rate" just once in allusion to the people that keeps nagging about rating but never propose any solution. The only thing I could use the rating for is to do not make the same mistakes of the past. In my sociology class, I learned that: "it has the same steps as the scientific method, except experimentation, and the laboratory for the sociologies is the history." What I learned from the history? What are my solutions so mistakes of the past aren't going to hunt us? The ones I wrote above.
1. We're not providing enough good answers to enough of the good, answerable questions being asked.
The first problem can be solved by more people writing answers, more appropriate canonical questions, and better ways of figuring out when questions are duplicates.
I try to navigate in all the crap that get to our seas:
I produce about 2-4 answers per day. My unscored rate, since we need numbers here, is about 23.8 percent. Only 10 unscored answers of ~165 (darn query don't say how many answers is the base) which is a pretty fantastic number *eats a cookie*. Then I leave 38 comments (yesterday) for about 20 odd questions. I normally use my 40-30 up/down votes/day I have, but I couldn't use all my flags (I think I flag 10-15 answers/questions day). I don't know others, but I give closure (makes the question answerable, flag, answer) to an average of 10 questions/day *pats his own head*. And I still do things in RL. The questions I normally answer are the very same I get from the review queue (any review queue).
I wonder how others manage to come across questions that they might have a godly answer between all the noise, when I still rant about this problem, and seems to be efficient. I would love to write more canonical questions/answers, but since Unity + USC + Gwibber + other oddities + my system = problem, I have to keep myself away of Ubuntu. BTW, remember that great questions makes great answers.
Users often post badly formulated or unanswerable questions, then expect they will get good answers.
The second problem can be solved by constructive reviewing, commenting, upvoting and downvoting, editing, closing, and reopening.
Lets teach them that's not our philosophy with the tools we have at hand. While I can edit bad grammar of some users, if it still lacks something that I have to comment, I put edit aside, favorite the question (or check my own revision history), leave the comment then if he comes by and fix his question, then I fix his grammar, if it hasn't be fixed yet (since I'm taking 2 reputation of another user, I might leave them). Of course, this doesn't mean that I don't follow the question... I take care of each of the ~15 questions I review a day. I also keep myself updated of each answer that other users make to this questions, and this is what takes most of my time here.
Closing more questions is valuable, but it would only contribute slightly to solving the first problem. We should close more questions, but not to improve some made-up number. Our goal is to do better, not to look like we're doing better.
Totally agree.
3. When a question has a good answer, that often means we should not close it as unclear. When considering whether or not to close a question, how many answers it has and what they say really is sometimes relevant.
I have some reserves about this.
Let's take extra care to make sure we're not misreading hard questions as vague.
Actually those are the ones I like.