Thank you! As I hinted in my response to Nebu above, I can see there are some personal predictions as well. I have a couple doubts about using it, though:
I wouldn’t want to publicly predict very personal events, even if it’s pseudonymous, done through VPN and marked as non-public. Just knowing that such a sensitive information is sitting on a server somewhere would make me uncomfortable.
When analysing predictions, grouping them by tags is a necessary feature for me. For example, I suspect I’m too pessimistic about my personal finance, but too optimistic about interpersonal relations. In fact, this impression is what got me started on this idea in the first place. I would consider implementing this feature in PredictionBook, but then I would want to do that through my regular github account, so my identity could be linked to my predictions even easier.
There doesn’t seem to be any way to export your predictions for a more advanced analysis.
Overall, though, this is a great project and very relevant. I’m just being very picky.
I just made predictions, a computer program that analyzes tagged predictions, public. If you’re comfortable compiling Go programs you might want to check it out. (Fair warning: the documentation and its organization hasn’t quite caught up with the program.)
Thank you! As I hinted in my response to Nebu above, I can see there are some personal predictions as well. I have a couple doubts about using it, though:
I wouldn’t want to publicly predict very personal events, even if it’s pseudonymous, done through VPN and marked as non-public. Just knowing that such a sensitive information is sitting on a server somewhere would make me uncomfortable.
When analysing predictions, grouping them by tags is a necessary feature for me. For example, I suspect I’m too pessimistic about my personal finance, but too optimistic about interpersonal relations. In fact, this impression is what got me started on this idea in the first place. I would consider implementing this feature in PredictionBook, but then I would want to do that through my regular github account, so my identity could be linked to my predictions even easier.
There doesn’t seem to be any way to export your predictions for a more advanced analysis.
Overall, though, this is a great project and very relevant. I’m just being very picky.
I just made predictions, a computer program that analyzes tagged predictions, public. If you’re comfortable compiling Go programs you might want to check it out. (Fair warning: the documentation and its organization hasn’t quite caught up with the program.)
Sweet, thank you! I will definitely try it out.