LANGREITER.COM plain, simple | |||||
START INDEX | |||||
Freitag, 2. Dezember 2005 IQOQI: Erstes Quantenbyte (a.k.a. qubyte) verschränkt.Welcome to the Republic of Word. Raul Valdes-Perez: Why Search Personalization is a Dead End "Given these difficulties, search personalization is likely to waste the talents of top computer scientists." The problems Mr Valdes-Perez enumerates are real; nevertheless I think that it's quite an exaggeration to declare search personalization a dead end, wholesale. One problem with his argument is definitional in nature; assuming a very broad definition of personalization, the Web (experience) is inherently personalized, always, it couldn't be any other way - unless I'm forced to surf sites in a predefined sequence; a rather unlikely scenario in most countries, fortunately. Similarly, every single search I'm conducting is inherently personalized - conditioned on my current interests which in turn are expressed through a couple of words. Clearly, he has a very specific form of personalization in mind. Unfortunately he doesn't tell us which, but probably he's thinking about variations of the (presumably) profile-driven kind currently being phased in by Google; a kind of all-or-nothing personalization which gives users very little control over (or even an idea of) how it's actually affecting results. It might be more meaningful to discuss much more specific aspects of personalization, for example factors and what level of control people get over them. I'd certainly like to know what factors influence what information reaches me, and ideally, I want to be able to control those factors, to play with them as easily as with search terms. On Amazon, for example, I find the personalized sections on the front-page to be of fairly low value; of the problems mentioned by Valdes-Perez, #1, #4 and #5 apply (profile lag, shared computers/accounts, very little intent information). The only means of control I have of what information reaches me there is to either buy a product - or not. By navigating to individual products, however, I'm very much in (real-time, even!) control of what information reaches me, and it's quite clear why I'm getting it: because other people who bought the lamp I'm looking at also bought that snow wovel. SNARF: Social Network and Relationship FinderWired: "The spyware wars are over - and spyware has won." How [create Gator] became Claria: "While everyone hates pop-ups, nobody much minds behind-the-scenes spying." no comments Please log in (you may want to register first) to post comments! |
SEARCH
GET YOUR MOVE ON ALMOST ALL ABOUT YOU So log in, fella — or finally get your langreiter.com account. You always wanted one. Nearby in the temporal dimension: Nobody. ... and 32 of the anonymous kind. Click on for a moderate dose of lcom-talk. This will probably not work in Lynx and other browser exotica. THIS DAY IN HISTORY 2005 / 2004 / 2003 / 2002 BACKLINKS none RECENT EDITS (MORE) films-seen Blood Stone y!kes wet towel B Studio Pilcrow News Nastassja Kinski 2011-10-06-steve 2011-10-06 comment-2011-08-04-1 POWERED BY &c. GeoURL RSS 0.92 FRIENDLY SHOPS Uncut Games bei Gameware OFFEN! Offenlegung gem. §25 MedienG: Christian Langreiter, Langkampfen See also: Privacy policy. |