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The tag currently has 208 questions. About all of them are tagged with and another tag specifying the related product of HP which is the actual main tag of the respective question.

The tag doesn't provide any additional information in addition to the product-specific tags, it is a meta-tag. In fact, nobody can be a specialist in all the things HP. This is reflected in the question stats for the tag: many are bad or off-topic (or both). Generally, questions using only the tag without any product-specific tag seem to be overwhelmingly off-topic (e.g. they involve using HP laptops or printers).

Generally, people should, can, and do use the actual product-specific tag (which they almost always do already).

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    All manufacturer tags are useless. And there are quite a lot of them out there...
    – Lundin
    Feb 20, 2015 at 10:03

1 Answer 1

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Agreed. Tags for companies are useless to SO. We do not deal with companies; we work with the programming-related products they produce.

I went ahead and removed the tag from the remaining 200 questions (the other 8 were already done when I started). The tag will be officially burninated when the tag-cleaning script runs tonight.

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    Psst... its got a tag wiki.
    – user289086
    Feb 19, 2015 at 0:46
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    I'm not sure I understand. The question you linked says: "To clarify, this is about tags that have exactly one question". I removed [hp] from all questions.
    – user2555451
    Feb 19, 2015 at 0:59
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    Ahh, I stand corrected. Nevermind then.
    – user289086
    Feb 19, 2015 at 1:01
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    I'm not so sure. In the questions I answer, which are mostly OpenGL related, company tags are pretty useful. Something will be tagged [nvidia], [amd] or [intel] depending on which GPU vendor the issue affects. Feb 20, 2015 at 3:11
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    @AndonM.Coleman agreed; yet we work with the programming-related products they produce. - [amd] is more about AMD APIs, chipsets, CPU/GPU instruction sets etc., than about the company branding itself. AMD/nVidia/Intel are, in their way, more of architectures than companies. HP, at least IMO, ain't.
    – user719662
    Feb 20, 2015 at 10:23
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    Note that SO still has a pa-risc with... ahem... 5 question in it. Since it has no wiki tag and many young'uns might have not even heard of it: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PA-RISC Feb 21, 2015 at 11:26

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