Having a tag that covers more than half of the questions seems disproportionate. Is this tag really relevant? Are all the questions tagged sharepoint-2010 really specific to that version?
Let's look at the top tags on a few sites:
- SharePoint: 794 questions, 493 (62%)
sharepoint-2010, 140 sharepoint-2007, 56 development.
- Drupal: 1349 questions, 618 (46%)
drupal-6, 542 drupal-6, 150 views.
- WordPress: 6290 questions, biggest tag 673 (11%)
plugins, biggest version tag 313 wordpress-3.
- Ubuntu: 14194 questions, 1893
10.10, 1555 (11%) 11.04, 915 10.04, 902 `unity.
- English: 6519 questions, 930 (14%)
meaning.
- Unix: 4040 questions, 840 (21%)
linux.
I haven't looked at the content of Drupal and SharePoint, but from these figures I suspect that WordPress and Ubuntu are doing this right and Drupal and SharePoint are doing it wrong. I included English in this list because I think they've done a good job of getting useful tags with a difficult subject matter. I included Unix partly because I know it well, and partly to show that even though something like 95% of the questions are from people running Linux¹, most of these questions don't have the linux tag because it's not relevant to the question.
Enforcing that a version or variant tag is only used when it matters takes some work (I know I retag a lot on Unix), but it's worthwhile to be able to search version-specific questions if you find you have a version-specific issue (it worked under 2007, no longer does under 2010, so I want to search 2010-specific answers only), or to ignore versions you don't care about.
Concluding with something that directly addresses your question: on Unix, where I have no favorite tags and view almost every question, no question is highlighted.
¹ That was an off-the-cuff estimate, but the questions tagged with unix variants other than Linux do seem to add up to around 5%.
sharepoint-2010? – Cody Gray May 20 '11 at 12:45