Yes, looking at "newest" questions is a bit like trying to drink water from a firehose. It doesn't work out very well. Too many new questions are posted every second, pushing out the previous ones before they ever get eyeballs on them. You quickly lose track of where you were, and can easily miss the signal amongst all the noise.
(Image from "6 reasons why your business needs to curate content and 17 practical tips for doing it", by Jay Palter.)
However, it turns out that very few programmers people are experts in everything. Instead, we are all experts in a fairly narrow subset of topics, where we would prefer to focus our attention. That means the "newest" questions page is essentially useless, because it shows an unfiltered view of all questions coming in, including many that we don't care about.
It works better to drink water from a glass or jug. Stack Overflow has many types of drinking vessels available, but all of them rely on tags. We use tags here to categorize content, and these are the primary means by which experts are connected with relevant questions. If you're an expert in Java, you follow the java tag. There are many ways that you can use tags to find questions to answer.
Tag searches. One of the simplest ways to find questions by tag is simply to search/filter by tag. You can type a tag into the search box at the top of every page, and it will display the newest questions with that tag. You can also use more advanced operators, allowing you to combine tags, exclude tags, and so on. I have a couple of these search queries bookmarked, and this is what I principally work from when answering questions. In my conversations with other experienced users, I find that I'm far from alone.
Favorite/ignored tags. Sometimes, though, even a tag search turns up too many false positives and noise. Consider that you're a desktop Java programmer trying to follow the java tag. You will quickly be overwhelmed with android questions. You could filter these out of your search, but if you never wanted to see any Android questions, you could add the android tag to your list of "ignored tags" (tracked and stored with your profile) so that these questions are always filtered out (or simply appear greyed-out, as you prefer). Similarly, you can add tags to your "favorites" list, and questions with these tags will be shown highlighted (light orange background) in lists of questions, making them easier to spot. I make extensive use of favorite/ignored tags. It really didn't take me long to get them set up, and I've gradually refined the list over the years, so that by now, the number of irrelevant questions that I see is manageable.
"Interesting" questions. The Stack Overflow home page is actually one of the most underrated views that exists on this site. This shows you questions that the site deems "interesting" for you. Such calculation is based on your favorite/ignored tags, as well as algorithmically determined based on the tags of the questions you tend to interact with, as well as several other factors. This page shows which tags the system thinks are most interesting to you; it's creepy how accurate it is, at least for me. So, this type of "interesting" filtering actually happens by default, just by interacting with the site, even if you haven't taken the time to customize your tag preferences. I camp out on the home page most of the time, and always use that view when I'm away from my primary machine (and thus my custom tag search queries are unavailable).
Using these tools, you can get a pretty nice, filtered view of questions that should be interesting and relevant to you. By using tags effectively, a number of smaller, more focused "communities" can exist within the larger site that is Stack Overflow. I'm of the opinion that this works far better than if we were to break up the site into a number of smaller, more dedicated sites, because we can essentially have the best of both worlds.
Notice, though, that I've emphasized the word "should". Why? Because there are still a lot of low-quality, off-topic, garbage questions that get asked within your domain of interest. For example, I follow the x86 tag because I'm an expert in assembly language and micro-optimization for that architecture. Unfortunately, that tag attracts a lot of, "What computer should I build?" and "My computer is broken?" questions. In language tags, there are a dizzying array of no-effort code dumps and assignments sans questions. These, as you say, push out the interesting and relevant questions.
I think this is one of the biggest problems facing Stack Overflow today. And it affects everyone equally. It affects askers of good questions, because it means their questions don't get seen and therefore they don't get the answers they deserve. It affects answers, because it means they drown in noise, waste a lot of time, and can't find the questions they're actually here to answer because they enjoy doing it. It even affects the people who navigate to Stack Overflow from search engines, because the relevant questions they've found are less likely to have a good answer.
And yet, I'm not sure what can be done about it. Sure, I have a few ideas, like expanding the close-vote privileges given to gold tag badge holders, tightening up the quality filters, and improving the user experience surrounding the Ask Question page. Some of these (like the latter) are in various stages of being implemented. Others are possibly on the company's radar, but low priority. Still others haven't even been seriously considered yet.
The good news, though, is that Stack Overflow has finally created a team dedicated to improving Q&A, and they are soliciting feedback from us. If you have ideas on how the site can be improved—especially with regard to allowing users to find questions and/or decreasing the amount of low-quality questions—then please share them!