It's perfectly legitimate for an answer to be correct (and accepted as such), only to later have another answer be better (e.g. more efficient, or clearer).
If an asker gets a better answer it's perfectly legitimate to un-accept and accept the better one, in fact it should be encouraged!
That can happen months or even years later. There's a silver badge for answering 60 days after the question was asked (and getting +5).
I've answered a question two years after it was asked, it's not accepted but it now has more upvotes that the accepted answer. Of course, I answered this because I had the same question and was not satisfied with any of the existing answers. My point is: even if the limit were increased it still wouldn't catch all.
In defense of 15 minutes:
- 15 minutes is enough to write a solid answer to most questions.
- If you recievereceive an answer in that time that solves your problem (and satisfies you), accepting should be encouraged (by the system).
- Askers should stick around for a while e.g to clarify their question. The 15 minute wait, kinda forces them to do that (if they want the +2)... if it's much longer it means they'll have to accept in their next session (so why hang around?).
- MitiagesMitigates accepting the first junk answer, that may be enough to convince the OP but would be downvoted by anyone else reading (after downvoting the OP will be less lightly to accept).
I suspect that increasing it beyond 15 minutes would only mean fewer accepts.
That said, whether this should be configurable for other sites is a different question.