I think we should change the guidance on how to write the tag wiki entries (and the excepts). I think we should stop telling people to give guidance on how to use the tag and just allow them to be full-blown wiki-like entries. Java tag is a good example -- I don't think it benefits from telling people to use it with other tags.
Are the tag wiki guidelines working?
No - the majority of tags do not have usage guidance in them. The majority of tags are descriptions of the tools and that's it.
Can you speculate as to why not?
The guidelines aren't being read
Should they be removed?
No, SO needs legal cover (plausible deniability) for user-provided content, otherwise, they'd be on the hook when someone posts a link to objectionable material.
Plus, sometimes reviewers read them.
I actually like the wiki-like description of tools that this feature has morphed in to over the years. It doesn't seem to have decreased the quality of questions (most people seem to get that this is a programming site). And, if this is truly community-driven, then the community has resoundingly spoken.
Most people get how to use a tag intuitively -- tagging is not a new idea any more. And most people get that SO is a programming focused website. What they don't get, is why they should use tags to tell people how to use tags and that they should only post programming questions.
What changes are you recommending?
Change the guidance to reflect how this feature is actually being used by the community. Something like:
"Tag wiki entries should describe the tool, but shouldn't be a direct copy of someone else's work because that's plagiarism, copyright infringement, and illegal (unless it's Wikipedia, then it's fair game). Anyone violating this rule will be shot."