Re: virus: Archives

B. Lane Robertson (metaphy@hotmail.com)
Fri, 08 May 1998 12:23:00 PDT


Can be done (even the part about weighing the value
of certain ratings based on a ranking circularly
defined by the ratings)! Very interactive. Very
innovative. Highly competitive idea with potential
market improvement and financial rewards for this
list. Instead of html mail, perhaps a filter on the
server that looks for replies with rankings
indicated along with a cgi program that applies the
sender's weighted value to the sum total rank as
regards the post no. being responded to.

Who can write this cgi program or knows of someone
who will write such a program?

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>Date: Fri, 08 May 1998 09:37:55 -0500
>From: Bill Haloupek <haloupekb@UWSTOUT.EDU>
>Subject: Re: virus: Archives
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>I don't know what proportion of the list readers use html mail,
>but if everybody did, maybe you could get the server to put
>in tags in every post so that readers could rate each one. Just
>click one of the numbers 1-10, say, and that gets sent to the
>server. The server keeps score and sends out a monthly "best of"
>digest. You would have to fix it so each reader can only vote
>once for each post, and can't rate their own posts.
>
>Also, since I'm not all that democratic, I'd like to see people who
>tend to make more sense have more influence. If your posts get
>high ratings, then your ratings of other posts count more.
>
>A couple of years ago I heard about a news server that lets you
>rate news items and then "learns" your preferences by comparing
>your ratings with others'. If you tend to rate high the same items
>that John Smith does, then you will automatically be sent anything
>rated high by John Smith. I know that Pointcast and MSNBC let
>you rate stories, but I don't know if they learn your preferences.
>I think this is important because I don't have the same tastes as
>the average person. I want crap like the Jerry Springer show
>and Cosmopolitan etc filtered out for me.
>
>I would like to see academic journals take this approach as well.
>The main barrier to making research papers available online has
>been refereeing. If you read a refereed journal, you can be assured
>that the facts have been carefully checked, and you are not wasting
>your time reading some crackpot theory. The refereeing process
>has always been a good filter for academic literature. Unfortunately,
>it is expensive, so journals can't make their papers freely available
>online, even though the authors would love to have them freely
>available.
>
>Anyway, I think that the distinction between a research paper and
>a post on a discussion list will continue to fade in the coming
decades.
>Automatic rating/refereeing will probably be incorporated into all
kinds
>of online public communication. If you say something online that
>makes sense, it will get circulated, regardless of where you said it.
>Make sense?
>--
>
>Bill Haloupek
>haloupekb@uwstout.edu
>http://www.mscs.uwstout.edu/~billh/home.html
>
>
>

B. Lane Robertson
Indiana, USA
http://www.window.to/mindrec
AAA000

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