‘Take over’? Are they eating your predictions? Do you wake up and find your predictions have been infected with comments about MoR? Did you have a quota I didn’t know about and these MoR predictions are filling up your hard drive? Hardly anyone of them have a due date in the next year, so you can’t be complaining about their judgment or controversies, so what are you complaining about?
Specifically, for instance, what’s happening when I view the “Happenstance” or “Recent predictions” lists is that I have to scroll, sometimes over a screen’s worth, to get past a big chunk of predictions which I can tell are of no interest to me. This is demotivating (even though I have read HPMoR), a trivial inconvenience.
To me (and I can perfectly understand not everyone feels that way) the HPMoR predictions are noise, as are the private predictions such as “I will complete 100 push-ups by next month”. I have no interest in refining my map of a fictional universe, or my map of a total stranger’s motivational structure or muscular strength.
The appeal to me of PredictionBook isn’t as a repository of predictions which are private to one person or that have a very narrow appeal. I can totally understand if someone else chooses to use it that way—though it’s worth noting that its UI is not consistent with that usage.
What I’m expecting from PredictionBook is a diverse stream of somewhat challenging predictions which motivate me to take the risk of being wrong. What other PredictionBook users get in return is my occasionally contributing a prediction that makes the site more interesting, if by some epsilon value, for everyone else.
I’m not paying anything, so I don’t have a right to complain about the service—I’m also free to quietly stop using it. I just thought it would be of some value to other users to give, as it were, an exit interview.
I’m not paying anything, so I don’t have a right to complain about the service
Nonsense. You have a right to complain about anything. And some optimal prices are negative; there’s nothing magical about a service you pay $0 to use (not counting the time you spend using it!) as compared to $0.01 or -$0.01.
No, he’s right to complain. We really do need a tagging system so we can filter out the kinds of prediction statements we don’t want to see. For instance, I resolved not to read anymore HPMoR (I stopped at about chapter 65) until I complete certain others goals (of which, I use PredictionBook to help with motivation), but it is very difficult for me to avoid spoilers with the site’s current setup. I’m sure others have similar problems.
‘Take over’? Are they eating your predictions? Do you wake up and find your predictions have been infected with comments about MoR? Did you have a quota I didn’t know about and these MoR predictions are filling up your hard drive? Hardly anyone of them have a due date in the next year, so you can’t be complaining about their judgment or controversies, so what are you complaining about?
This isn’t a complaint, it’s feedback.
Specifically, for instance, what’s happening when I view the “Happenstance” or “Recent predictions” lists is that I have to scroll, sometimes over a screen’s worth, to get past a big chunk of predictions which I can tell are of no interest to me. This is demotivating (even though I have read HPMoR), a trivial inconvenience.
To me (and I can perfectly understand not everyone feels that way) the HPMoR predictions are noise, as are the private predictions such as “I will complete 100 push-ups by next month”. I have no interest in refining my map of a fictional universe, or my map of a total stranger’s motivational structure or muscular strength.
The appeal to me of PredictionBook isn’t as a repository of predictions which are private to one person or that have a very narrow appeal. I can totally understand if someone else chooses to use it that way—though it’s worth noting that its UI is not consistent with that usage.
What I’m expecting from PredictionBook is a diverse stream of somewhat challenging predictions which motivate me to take the risk of being wrong. What other PredictionBook users get in return is my occasionally contributing a prediction that makes the site more interesting, if by some epsilon value, for everyone else.
I’m not paying anything, so I don’t have a right to complain about the service—I’m also free to quietly stop using it. I just thought it would be of some value to other users to give, as it were, an exit interview.
Nonsense. You have a right to complain about anything. And some optimal prices are negative; there’s nothing magical about a service you pay $0 to use (not counting the time you spend using it!) as compared to $0.01 or -$0.01.
No, he’s right to complain. We really do need a tagging system so we can filter out the kinds of prediction statements we don’t want to see. For instance, I resolved not to read anymore HPMoR (I stopped at about chapter 65) until I complete certain others goals (of which, I use PredictionBook to help with motivation), but it is very difficult for me to avoid spoilers with the site’s current setup. I’m sure others have similar problems.