I see more questions that I would like to read, so ... good job.
But...
This is maybe out-of-scope for the current set of improvements, as it probably will require an entirely different algorithm/approach. However, it may be a good suggestion for further improvements.
I have still a difficult time finding questions that I would like to answer. For me, most of the questions there are too "easy": questions you could easily answer in a few lines, or with a quick google search.
I personally look for questions and answers with more depth; I know, it's probably a personal preference, but it should show from my answer history.
If I prefer to answer to long, elaborated questions from users with high rep, I probably like "hard" questions; same if my answers are long and convoluted: I might be interested in answering a long, well written question which has only a short, almost-link-only (or code-only) question.
My 2 cents
EDIT:
Let me make an example.
This question is in my list (C# command line add reference to Microsoft.Office.Interop.Excel)
- Is it relevant to my favorites? Yes, I have C# among my favorite tags.
- Is it a question worth answering? Yes, I suppose. Simple questions do find a place on SO.
- Could I answer it? Definitely
- Would I answer it? No... It's just not my cup of tea.
This question (How to convert an event to an IObservable when it doesn't conform to the standard .NET event pattern) and this one (Y-combinator implementation in javascript and elixir) are also in my list. And I like both of them (acutally, I was answering the first one but someone was faster...)
Could an algorithm see it? Probably yes, using a combination of question score, my history, question length...
It is not simple; indeed, there are some very difficult tags. Javascript, for example, and to a lesser extent C#. I do like Javascript, the language, and C#, the language. I do not like questions about web page fiddling or about windows forms controls. They are entirely legitimate questions, but they are beginner's questions and I do not have time (unfortunately) to answer all the questions I can answer. Distinguish among them is quite hard. Understand if I, as a user, prefer "hard" or "simple" questions is hard as well. But someone can always wish it, right? :)
I wonder: how high-rep users (Eric Lippert, Jon Skeet, Mark Gravell, Hans Passant.. to quote e few active under the C# tag) find questions they like to answer?
excel
in both pages that isn't interesting for me. I have ignored all tags for windows and ms-office (not the sub-ones for word, excel ...) so I don't want to see excel results (and there were no other tag in the question that I marked as a favorite)