The point of the feature-request is so the community can suggest changes to any of the sites. We get tons of them across the entire network, some of them well-received, others not so much.
I can tell you that we (the SE staff) are always monitoring MSO/MSE and most of the other Meta sites for suggestions. Do we look for things more well-received than others (aka the popularity) of the request? Of course we do, but... proposing a feature and then getting it implemented are much different things.
I can only speak from my experience. If I see something that I think, "hey I like that idea", there are several steps to get it implemented; it's not as simple as poking a dev and asking them to do it. I'll spend time researching it, looking at data, figuring out possible implications, talking to others on the team, and then if we think it's feasible, writing it up. But writing it up still doesn't necessarily mean it will happen. I've asked for things and they get denied, or deferred due to lack of resources or it's a bigger project than we have time for right now.
I'd say most of the features have been seen by someone on the team, it's just not feasible for us to add a status-* tag to everything because they all take time to research, etc before making a final decision.
As far as adding a status- tag to a feature they are not based on popularity. We typically add them based on the following:
- status-declined is added when we know a particular request is not going to be implemented. It can be added immediately when a feature is just plain ridiculous or at a later time if we've investigated it and have decided we will not do it.
- status-deferred is added when we've either done some research but it's too much work at a specific time or it's in the plan for a later implementation.
- status-review is normally added to things that are being reviewed by staff (research, etc) to possibly implement or has already been written up and sent to the devs to implement .
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Can we have a guaranteed pipeline for responses from Stack Exchange?