I lurk in on the serial-port tag a lot and sometimes see questions which are about USB. I guess people think it is the universal serial bus and so it is related. But the serial-port tag summary states:
A serial port is a physical interface through which data is transferred (uni- or bidirectionally) one bit at a time. The term usually refers to the RS-232 port with a 9-pin d-sub connector that was once the standard serial interface on a PC.
I assumed that this would exclude USB since usb has its own tag.
So I edited one of those questions to remove the serial-port tag and it got rejected (edit).
My question is: Was this rejection correct? Shouldn't I have edited this question?
Maybe another question is, should the serial-port tag also include USB and Bluetooth in its summary, since those often use the same libraries in C and Java?
EDIT:
I just noticed that the more detailed tag summary states:
A serial port is a physical interface through which data is transferred (uni- or bidirectionally) one bit at a time. The term usually refers to the RS-232 port with a 9-pin d-sub connector that was once the standard serial interface on a PC. Serial port may also refer to the logic-level interface of a UART on a SBC (single board computer). Other types of interfaces that use "serial" transfer (such as USB, SATA, SPI, I2C, and TWI) should not be called "serial port", but by their proper protocol name.
Largely superseded in the consumer market by USB, serial connections are still commonly used in many other specialist applications. Typical applications include scientific/medical instruments, industrial controllers and server diagnostics.
More information:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Serial_port http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RS-232
So I guess the discussion if USB is meant to be taged serial-port is answered now.