Saturday, December 31, 2005
Thursday, December 29, 2005
Sunday, December 25, 2005
Wednesday, December 21, 2005
Yahoo Answers
Have you seen Yahoo answers at answers.yahoo.com? Users ask questions and then other users answer them. At the same time there is a moderation system where you can vote for the best answer. Presumably, the people whose questions get consistantly moderated well get more points and their moderations get more weight and their answers are given more weight. This idea is really obvious, but has the potential to be as transformative as the Wikipedia. The problem of course is that to get people to use it, other people have to be using it already. Google has a system where people pay money for an answer and only handpicked group of contractors are allowed to answer any question. I think that this is a much less exciting option.
In Korea, the website Naver (www.naver.com) used this idea in 2004 to not only become one of the top websites in Korea, but to drive their search engine to dominant marketshare over Yahoo and Google.
So Yahoo launched answers in the US around a week ago and they have a substantial amount of traffic. But here are some random questions and answers:
Question: A woman has 7 children, half of them are boys.How can this be possible?
Answer: maybe one of them is bi! or one could be gay.
Question: Why will a ducks quack not echo?
Answer: wE HAVE MANY DUCKS ON OUR FARM AND WHEN THEY GET STARTED THEY RAISE HELL AND ECHO AS WELL
Question: Biologically, is there a reason as to why the age of the girl must be les than the age of the guy in a couple?
...
Question: If evolution is correct and there is no god why cant I shoot you?
...
You have to see these to believe them.
So what is the problem with Yahoo Answers? The implementation seems to be working very hard to reduce questions like this. Surely the Korean site wouldn't be the top Korean destination on the net for information if it was filled with garbage like this. Are there cultural differences causing this type of system not to work in the United States? I mean if more people believe that aliens are likely to exist than that evolution is likely to be true, maybe using the collective intelligence will never work in this country. That seems pretty sad.
In Korea, the website Naver (www.naver.com) used this idea in 2004 to not only become one of the top websites in Korea, but to drive their search engine to dominant marketshare over Yahoo and Google.
So Yahoo launched answers in the US around a week ago and they have a substantial amount of traffic. But here are some random questions and answers:
Question: A woman has 7 children, half of them are boys.How can this be possible?
Answer: maybe one of them is bi! or one could be gay.
Question: Why will a ducks quack not echo?
Answer: wE HAVE MANY DUCKS ON OUR FARM AND WHEN THEY GET STARTED THEY RAISE HELL AND ECHO AS WELL
Question: Biologically, is there a reason as to why the age of the girl must be les than the age of the guy in a couple?
...
Question: If evolution is correct and there is no god why cant I shoot you?
...
You have to see these to believe them.
So what is the problem with Yahoo Answers? The implementation seems to be working very hard to reduce questions like this. Surely the Korean site wouldn't be the top Korean destination on the net for information if it was filled with garbage like this. Are there cultural differences causing this type of system not to work in the United States? I mean if more people believe that aliens are likely to exist than that evolution is likely to be true, maybe using the collective intelligence will never work in this country. That seems pretty sad.
Tuesday, December 20, 2005
Second Podcast
If you liked the last podcast, here's the REMIX:
http://www.lukebiewald.com/jesusremix.mp3
http://www.lukebiewald.com/jesusremix.mp3
Thursday, December 15, 2005
First Minja Lurtle's Podcast
Here at 832 Capp st. we explore all forms of technologies, memetics, emergent informatics, socio-techno revolutions and web 2.0. It's like I keep telling Tess, "The medium is the message".
So here is the first podcast.
See if you can guess the identity of the signing hippie.
So here is the first podcast.
See if you can guess the identity of the signing hippie.
Wednesday, December 14, 2005
watch out Luke
you don't want to make the germans mad
Ich will sofort hören wer del.icio.us kaputt gemacht hat! SOFORT! Ich kann so nicht bloggen.
Ich will sofort hören wer del.icio.us kaputt gemacht hat! SOFORT! Ich kann so nicht bloggen.
Tuesday, December 13, 2005
Arnold likes ass
and rightly so. in case you haven't seen the Arnold in Rio video:
http://www.ifilm.com/ifilmdetail/2683788?htv=12
http://www.ifilm.com/ifilmdetail/2683788?htv=12
Thursday, December 08, 2005
Mam, or womam
Wednesday, December 07, 2005
you gotta believe in yourself
L. E. J. Brouwer (Luitzen Egbertus Jan, 1881-1966) was a Dutch mathematician and the founder of intuitionism, a philosophy which admits only things that can be constructed by finitary means. In particular, intuitionism does not accept the validity of the Law of the Excluded Middle, nor the Axiom of Choice. Ironically, Brouwer is best known (outside the philosophy of mathematics) for his fixed-point theorem, which he proved by means of conventional (non-constructive) analysis, i.e., techniques that he philosophically considered to be questionable if not downright invalid.
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