I notice some people use the terms "new forum" and "old forum." This implies OOoForum is depreciated or less useful. However, that's hardly the case. It contains a rich history of 260,000 posts, many of which contain valuable information not found anywhere else. OOoForum is still active both in terms of "ask-ers" and "answer-ers." Sometimes "old/new forum" is used in passing. I've also seen it as someone's signature (I don't recall whom.) In any case, I encourage people to reconsider terms with connotations.
More disheartening is the description of the two forums at at http://support.openoffice.org/ . One says, "The premier forum for OpenOffice.org users; immensely useful and recommended." Sure, USOO is good, but label is heavy on subjectivity and light on information. "Useful" to whom and how? What if you are looking for Macros and API posts only found on OOoForum? "Immensely?" And "recommended" by whom? One definition of "premier" is "first in time; earliest; oldest" and that is wrong, and the other definition of "premier" is subjective.
OOoForum is listed as "The (Unofficial) OpenOffice Forum." It's "unofficial" ? The term bothers me because it's used inconsistently and seems to imply something negative. Why isn't OOoForum instead called "The original (premier), largest, most active OpenOffice.org forum"?
Sorry for ranting. I just think OOoForum deserves more respect. I have to get it off my chest.

Finally, I encourage people who help answer questions here to consider also reading OOoForum. In either place, people are just looking for help.