@Andy pretty much summed up what I was going to answer with, but I have a little bit to add.
How do we define "online"? Activity in the last 5 minutes? last hour? last day? has an SO account? How we define that shows how accurate that number could possibly be under the best of circumstances (sure there may be 10k users on but you have such an esoteric or poorly described problem that none of them can actually answer).
Also, what about people that don't follow a tag but could answer? For example, I don't follow any tags right now, but I can answer a lot of questions in SQL, most of a .Net web stack, HTML, CSS, javascript, etc. Is the fact that I (presumably along with others) don't show up in the answerer number going to cause people to not ask questions? The accuracy of that number can't be all that good. Even as just a heuristic it might be OK at best, but since you seem to feel that this would be targeted at beginners, they are the people least likely to understand how good / bad of a heuristic it really is.
Also, the idea of discouraging asking based on how many people are online bothers me. We never want to discourage people from asking questions (and by that I mean good questions, we actively try to discourage asking garbage questions). We are trying to build up a repository of knowledge. Questions are the lifeblood of the site. Getting less of them can't possibly be a good thing.
In addition, what happens between tags with huge followings vs. very small tags? For example, at the time of writing, the C# tag has 56.6k followers. The R tag has 8k followers, d3.js has 1.9k and Flattr has 19. We want questions in all those tags, especially the smaller tags in order to build those communities. What about new technologies, where there aren't a lot of followers yet, but we really want to build those up? Are people going to not want to ask questions in new/small tags because the may not get answers?
Another thing, will this encourage mis-tagging questions just to get eyes on it? (Not saying that couldn't happen now, it just becomes much more appealing when you can see that adding another tag could boost the number of people looking at your question by a few orders of magnitude.)
I can see why you believe this might attract questions and help people get answers and then want to keep contributing to the community. However I feel like the downsides to this are numerous and far outweigh the potential good.