So, I was looking at this perfectly logical Excel meta merge thread and I was struck by the fact that
- I agree with the idea of changing the tag
- I have sometimes had trouble classifying more complicated questions I have asked with only so many tags.
- The moderator in this question said, "I can just add extra tags until these questions can be properly classified."
If a moderator is saying that he can and should in special cases add extra tags, why not just allow for an arbitrary number of tags. The moderation, reputation, and editing systems together should keep things reasonable, but as various systems and the knowledge base here mature I find myself asking more complicated questions about the interactions of multiple systems. This leads to more tags and either more specific or more general experts required.
So maybe stuffing ten tags on something is reasonable, sometimes.
ED, four hours later:
This question is ridiculously unpopular, which is kinda funny. Fundamentally, the point of a tagging system is to organize data better, and the more valid labels you have for a specific question the more likely it will be useful later in saving everyone time on searching for, asking, and answering redundant questions. The entire tagging system could probably use a revamp wherein tags are tiered (IE: Databases -> RDBMS -> Oracle -> Oracle X.X -> Oracle X.X.XA -> specific libraries and problems) because technically, all those tags should apply, and it's a big fat B-tree. As it is, the tagging system is extremely lossy, and kinda hit-or-miss on finding things.
As a native speaker with a fantastically broad technical vocabulary, I can find what I want if it's out there, and ask questions just fine, but I've started to work with people in a foreign country and they find things significantly more difficult to both ask about and find answers for.
My two cents, I'll probably eventually close this dumb thing because it's costing me reputation somewhere.