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by thinksketch
6071 days ago
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akamaka, I can understand how my blog might come across as self-important - I know I can be over the top, but that's part of the idea (see the tag line of my blog). The thing is, I'm writing for a general audience from the point of a general audience. I'm a designer not a programmer. And though I've read lots of articles in wired and on tech blogs about the netflix algorithm, I haven't heard much discussion about viable alternatives to the five star system. Yes, there are articles talking about how the rating system is faulty, and they talk about how to best "work around" the faults of the five star system. But I'm trying to brainstorm alternatives - scrap the system entirely and build an algorithm on something else. I'm sure the ideas are out there, I'm just indignant that as a general audience, we haven't heard about them yet. I'm getting great feedback already. Thanks greatly appreciated. For such a little UI pattern, the five star system plays an enormous influence on how we see the internet, and the effects of it have a tangible impact offline as well - for example, restaurant traffic influenced by yelp reviews. I've heard a lot of people question how five star reviews influence the range of products that we're exposed to. It seems like an important question to ask. Look and now we've got a good brainstorm going.. Maybe think of my post as a challenge and request for a detailed article from someone who knows their stuff about rating systems and how they effect our everyday life. Cheers - |
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Here are some prime examples of people making lots of noise without any data or science to back it up:
http://anand.typepad.com/datawocky/2008/03/more-data-usual.h...
http://scienceblogs.com/cortex/2009/08/netflix.php
There's actually very few people who have made genuine contributions toward winning the Netflix prize, as can be see in the winning team's final publications. They only list about a half-dozen key papers as references.
Anyways, I apologize for directing my comments specifically at you. I totally agree with your basic point, and this is a problem I've been spending a lot of time thinking about myself. My personal view is that explicit rating systems should be totally eliminated, in favor of using data gathered automatically, without asking the user to provide a subjective rating. I don't either have any evidence to prove that's better, mind you. :)