I don't think splitting Stack Overflow into smaller sub-sites would add overall value. It would probably have the opposite effect.
By nature, software development often encompasses multiple sub-subjects that overlap: PHP and MySQL, C++ and multithreading, Java and SSL, even Java and JavaScript.
Firstly, choosing the boundaries would be quite difficult. You could have a site for Tag A and Tag B, and another one for Tag C and Tag D, but where would you ask a question about Tag C and Tag C?
Secondly, even if we somehow agreed on some boundaries, this might actually increase the arguments about what belongs on a site and not another. I can't find the reference right now, but I seem to remember a few questions recently here on Meta requesting the migration of a question that was on-topic on another site. The idea was that it shouldn't necessarily be migrated out of Stack Overflow, since being on-topic somewhere else didn't mean it was off-topic here. (Practically, there is only a limited number of automatic migrations as it is.)
Thirdly, you could potentially miss out on the expertise of users who don't necessarily want to hang out on multiple site. A question that's apparently about C# could in fact have its root cause in the way that code is trying to make a SQL query, for example. Expecting SQL experts to be regulars of each sub-site that makes use of SQL could be a problem. (Of course, the problem can be reversed, you could have a question that seems to be able a SQL query that you would ask on DBA.SE, but it could turn out that what's causing the issue is the code calling it.)
Fourthly, the day you want to ask a question about Z, having gained reputation on X and Y, you couldn't make use of that reputation to place a bounty on your question (since you can't transfer reputation between sites). This also applies more generally to reputation-based privileges.
In addition, being exposed to questions about subjects you don't know anything about is generally a good thing for a developer, to gain some awareness of what's out there in terms of general programming knowledge.
Admittedly, there are relatively very few Generalist badge holders (I'm in fact partly surprised you asked that question, since you're one of them), but this doesn't mean that developers are not interested in a multitude of subjects at once.
One negative aspect of having so many subjects is that some reviewers don't necessarily refrain on voting on questions that they don't understand, but people with more experience in the subject would. This seems to result in a few cases of questions closed as "unclear" or generally "off topic", when they weren't actually so bad. I don't think the solution to that problem is to split Stack Overflow into sub-subjects.
The multitude of subjects on Stack Overflow can feel a bit overwhelming, but people can filter by tags if necessary. Perhaps filtering systems could be improved, but I don't think splitting the site per subject would be beneficial.
I think the real problem comes from bad questions (general poor quality, non-constructive, vague, or give-me-the-code) not so much from the breadth of subjects (all software development related).
(I would in fact suggest to be more lenient in what's off-topic in terms of subject (I'm not talking about the other kinds of "off-topic"), more specifically to allow more sysadmin type of questions, done within a development project, not suitable for Server Fault: I'd trade any 10 poor questions we get here for 1 such reasonably asked question.)
As for splitting the site per level of competence, besides the fact that it's generally self-determined, there are downsides I've mentioned in this answer:
There are questions, even by beginners, that require a relatively good
degree of expertise in the field, from the start (at the very least to
approve or disapprove with existing answers).
I remember seeing a case like this on SO a while back. I can't
remember the exact question, but it was about encrypting/hashing
passwords in PHP. Within 2 minutes, non-experts were pasting snippets
of code to try to answer the question (in a FGITW way), producing
answers that had the appearance to be correct and helpful (they got
rid of the problem and produced what looked like an "encrypted
result", i.e. gibberish). A few minutes later, someone more expert in
crypto (and with the relevant knowledge of the PHP API) produced a
detailed answer, not only giving a correct solution, but explaining
what was wrong with the other answers, and why they were insecure.
I guess it's quite clear that if we split SO into beginner and
advanced, experts would probably not be much present on the beginner's
site. Hence, wrong ideas would self-perpetuate on the beginner's site.
This has also been discussed a few times (see this question and its duplicates).