I learnt recently of the trend on Stack Overflow to burninate tags with company names (like apple, microsoft, amazon, ...) in favor of product-specific tags (like ios, windows, aws, ...).
This made me wonder what we should do for companies where no product exists that has the name of the company, but where the company name is often used as an - unofficial - reference to one or more products of the same company.
A good example would be sap. As I explained in my answer to the question What are ABAP and SAP?:
[...]
Although SAP ERP isn't the only software sold by SAP, people are typically referring to SAP ERP when they say "they're using SAP at work". It's important to note, though, that SAP is the name of the company and no software is sold or licensed as just "SAP".
[...]
It would make sense to burninate the sap tag in analogy with the apple & microsoft tags and replace it with product specific tags like abap, bapi, netweaver, sap-erp, etc. However, this may confuse eg. ABAP programmers and leave them puzzled on which tags to use in one of two situations:
- Their question involves sap-erp, but they don't think about using that tag as they're used to just calling the product sap (like almost everyone does)
- They have a general SAP-related programming question that doesn't refer to any specific SAP product
This makes me wonder... Should the sap tag be burninated, or does at least one of these two situations warrant a valid use for the sap tag?
Notes
The second situation doesn't apply only to companies where no product exists that has the name of a company. As I - just - commented here:
Personally, I don't how burninating eg. the apple & samsung tags would help people with general programming problems that apply to multiple products of that company. When considering situations where a programming question may apply to eg. all apple operating systems or all Samsung mobile devices, allowing only more specific tags would result in less exposure of the question and therefore a reduced likelihood of getting your question answered. How is that progress?!
Generally speaking, I believe the perfect tagging strategy involves multiple levels of specificity (or to paraphrase Shrek : "it's like an onion"). Here's two examples:
- Consider a question on HTTP Routing in PHP's Laravel library. In this case, I would use the tags php (general), symfony (narrowed down), laravel (narrowed down further) & routing + http (issue specific).
- Consider a question on BAPI programming, in SAP ERP. In this case, I would use the tags sap (general), sap-erp (narrowed down), abap (narrowed down further) & bapi + web-services (issue specific).
It is only the COMBINATION of such tags of various specificity that keeps both the quality & quantity of people checking out your question high, which seriously increases the chance of getting a good answer. In each of these cases, dropping any of those tags would reduce the effectiveness of the other tags.
Tags with company names can and typically do serve the same purpose as tags with programming languages: they give a high level specification of the environment the question applies to. This is why I personally see this trend to burninate tags with company names as a step backwards rather than a move forward, for reasons mentioned hereabove... But I guess that's just my five cents.
Burninate
implies destruction without reason. Why not justdeprecate
them by leaving them as synonyms and not having them applied to new questions?