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Oct 29 at 1:38 comment added Robert Spot on for review queues! Just because the next random question involved Cobol, doesn't mean I want to look at any Cobol questions.
Oct 24 at 5:58 comment added Mateen Ulhaq Instead of views, I think substantial interactions (e.g. answering a question) might be a better input signal.
Oct 15 at 21:35 comment added Ben Voigt @VLAZ: For that, they would do well to focus recommendations on those questions which share "tags which many people have in favorite tags list". Languages and frameworks will tend to be favorited a lot. Cross-cutting primitives like arrays won't be favorited by anyone. Cross-cutting research level stuff (neural-networks perhaps) will be favorited somewhere in between.
Oct 15 at 11:08 comment added VLAZ I'd be amazed if whatever you were thinking of didn't end up doing something similar. "Seems you've been looking at questions for arrays - here are other questions for arrays for languages you don't know". The behaviour I'd want to avoid is is that one. I feel I've given more than enough examples where that's wrong.
Oct 15 at 11:07 comment added VLAZ @SpencerG I've shared my experience. That was the data point I wanted you to consider. Because it seems nobody who does suggestion systems does that. The application I use to order fast food is even mocking me with this - if I open it, I get suggestions for "Since you ordered salads" which...I really should be ordering instead of the pizzas and burgers I actually order. But the suggestion algorithm seems to believe that since I've ordered from places that contain salads (which is most places. As side dishes), then it will suggest me this category.
Oct 10 at 20:31 comment added SpencerG StaffMod I think we are pretty receptive to feedback on this point. If you have different data points or site behavior you think we should incorporate, do let me know, and I can bring it up.
Oct 9 at 19:05 comment added starball no, the users are wrong. you're supposed to open anything you don't want the machine to think you want more of in an incognito window (I'm joking around, but I wish I was only joking about this)
Oct 8 at 11:05 comment added VLAZ @KevinB yes, the pidgeonholing is something I've also experienced with other platforms. When they try to suggest me stuff but also feed off on their suggestions, then form this magic inescapable circle that locks itself because it only suggests stuff that were similar to other suggestions. YouTube and music apps do this all the time. You'd start some "randomised" playlist and it just gives you the same stuff. YouTube in particular used to be really bad (probably still is) - you play some song, it continues with similar ones and narrows the range until it plays the same 3 songs over and over.
Oct 7 at 21:27 comment added Kevin B it also... will tend to pigeonhole people into areas and not really organically help them explore past that. I like the current interesting tab, because for me it's a relatively broad set of results, some that are relevant to my watched tags and many others that aren't, but it's what i'm looking for: a broad set of questions. If i wanted something tailored to a particular type of question... we have custom filters for that.
Oct 5 at 10:54 history answered VLAZ CC BY-SA 4.0