Wondir Features: In the works since 2002, Wondir is perhaps the oldest and most high-minded of the social Q&A services. The original idea of the site's founders, all search-industry veterans, was to index and organize content from the online reference services provided by libraries around the world. But the site evolved into a classic question-and-answer service, with more than a million questions and answers from beta users by the time of its official launch in April 2005. Wondir may have been the first to offer a Q&A widget, a ticker that can be embedded in other sites. (CarTalk.com has one that has proved popular among the NPR radio show's fans.) But the site's interface is clumsy and unattractive. The site was recently acquired by Revolution Health Group, an online health-care publisher, and most of the new questions and answers on the site seem to focus on medical issues, especially pregnancy. Points: 1 Is there any truth to the five-second rule? I couldn't tell whether Wondir contained an answer to this question. Frustratingly, the site provides no way to search for answers to previously posed questions: you have to sift through page after page of questions, which are shown in reverse chronological order. Points: 0 Why did the Mormons settle in Utah? Despite the site's turn to medical issues, Wondir does seem to have an active community of people answering questions in most areas. I got six answers to this question, three of which were useful, including this one: "They picked Utah because it was a place no one else would want!! Desolate, barren, hoping to be left alone to live their lives the way they wanted to live." Points: 2 What is the best way to make a grilled cheese sandwich? Because of Wondir's health orientation, I reworded this question as "What is the healthiest way to make a grilled cheese sandwich?" I got three answers, all of which were brief and fairly obvious: "Use wheat bread and low fat cheese and margarine instead of butter," "Leaving the cheese off is healthy," and "Margarine makes the bread soggy. Just put the bread directly on the griddle." Points: 1 Total points: 4 |









Comments
Thank you for your review. I am glad to see that you were able to find answers to your question on Yedda – "Why did the Mormons settle in Utah?" [http://yedda.com/questions/7353471740164/] and "What is the best way to make a grilled cheese sandwich?" [http://yedda.com/questions/8627840071015/].
I do believe you've missed a couple of features, when compared to other sites:
1. Yedda does not pose any limitations on the number of questions asked. It's not because we didn't get around to implementing a points system. It's because we don't believe in pointless point systems. The way I see it, it doesn't make sense to invite people to ask questions, but then, force them to add 10 "yes I agree" answers to other people questions just to have enough points to ask their question. The way we see it, people should be able to ask as many questions as they need to, to answer because they know the answer, and to vote because they feel an answer deserves a "thumbs up".
2. Yedda does not limit the number of characters in your questions or answers. We don't think you should be forced to fit your question into 100 characters or less. In fact, we invite you to be as detailed as you need to be – because that's what a social knowledge sharing is about – explaining your exact issue and circumstances to the readers of your question, so that they can provide you with the best answer, tailored to your needs.
3. It may seem trivial, but I noticed that you mentioned this in your review of the other services and might have missed it in Yedda – Yedda supports rich, formatted questions and answers, with links, pictures, and embedded video.
4. Yedda provides several widgets that can be added to your blog or web site. Among these widgets – a widget that lets your readers ask you (and the community) a question directly from your blog, a widget that produces an automatic, always-fresh F.A.Q on your blog topics, and a widget that displays your Yedda profile on your blog, so that your readers can see the great answers and thumbs up you've been getting. I invite you to add these widgets to your blog :)
But what's really different about Yedda is the semantic analysis capability and the proactive distribution mechanism.
The semantic analysis employed by Yedda enables us to provide the following services to our users:
1. Automatically suggest topics (tags) to questions based on semantic analysis of the question text. (This was pioneered by Yedda, and Amazon later added a similar service to Askville. I leave it to you to compare the quality of the suggestions in the 2 services).
2. Smart search – when you search for a topic in Yedda, our search is smart enough to find related Q&As automatically, even if they were tagged with a related topic. For example, searching for "fertility" will also return questions tagged with "pregnancy", "ovulation", etc.
3. Finding similar questions – Yedda always provides you with similar – and already answered – questions, whether when you ask your question or later.
4. Generating automatic, always-fresh FAQ –
The proactive distribution mechanism is the one responsible for taping your virtual shoulder at the right time, and drawing your attention to a question in your areas of interest and knowledge. In a sense, it's all about attention optimization. You see, we'd like to think that when you ask a question, you actually really want to get an answer for it. This is the reason why we attach a small monitor to each question, which continues to monitor the question status and your contentment with the answers posted so far. And as long as you still want more / better answers, this component keeps searching for the best people to answer your question and invites them to answer.
I guess that this is the reason why, even though Yedda is still quite young, and does not enjoy the marketing muscles of the big players, the Yedda community was still able to provide you with such great answers – on par and perhaps even exceeding the level of answers in the other services.
BTW, it's funny to note that when you search Google for your questions – "Why did the Mormons settle in Utah?" and "What is the best way to make a grilled cheese sandwich?" – it's the answers on Yedda which appear first. And no, we don't do any SEO. I guess that in a way this also demonstrates the vote of confidence we've been getting from people looking for useful answers from a friendly community of people.
Feel free to contact me by email (my first name at yedda.com) or through the "send message" on my Yedda profile if you have any more questions.
yanivg
12/22/2006
Posts:1
I'm sure there are many sites that would prove useful to TR readers.
lary999
12/22/2006
Posts:3
alexko
12/24/2006
Posts:1
BillBobbit
12/25/2006
Posts:1
http://joeldowns.com/2007/01/12/mit-tech-review-go-back-to-journalism-school/
AB-Joel
01/22/2007
Posts:1
Your review was interesting; I wanted to raise the issues of Urgency, Privacy and Trust. One of your comments was “two and a half days after I posted the question--I had received only one answer”.
Yahoo fixed that problem to some extent, and made it faster their game like point system and levels is effective.
By urgency, I refer to the simple question of where do you go to answer problems that require instant answers. Questions with your office software that refuses to print your market data for a report due yesterday, or your kid’s health.
Privacy has to do with - How public do you want your personal problem to be?
Trust, is all about knowing who provided the answer for my life savings investment question.
BitWine www.BitWine.com represents a new bread of answers sites. BitWine is a site where people do not search for the answer, but rather for the person with the knowledge to answer.
We provide Rich Media Platform that provides people the tools to express themselves in words hand gestures, voice, pictures with no limit on question space and without wasting time on phrasing the question. (All based on the popular Skype software)
All the Q&A process is done Directly and Discreetly one-on-one with a live Advisor.
The Voice & Video and the Advisor’s advertised Resume, as well as our Ranking system, provides the Client (the Asker) with a quick way of establishing initial trust in the person answering. In other words you can see that it is not a teenage kid explaining to you how to invest your life savings just because he got addicted to answering questions and collecting points.
The last aspect is really the quality of the advice. As you saw with your five seconds rule question, people just do not have the context to answer a short unconnected question. Writing a long question is also not a solution since it almost guarantees that only few people will even try to answer.
If you ask a business related question on most of the sites mentioned, as I have done, the likelihood of receiving any relevant answer becomes slim.
By introducing pay-per-time system BitWine attracts Advisors that have the knowledge to answer this higher level of questions, with higher level of expertise.
If you look around, you can see that Information is essentially free, yet Knowledge is not, specifically when a people do not have the time or the tools to derive the knowledge they need from the free available information out there.
Knowledge is something people acquire over the span of a lifetime, in most cases not in seconds over a tag search. Finding the person with the sufficient knowledge that can customize its existing know-how to a specific problem at hand, for an individual that needs a fast solution, was really the challenge we came to solve with BitWine.
There are some interesting successful companies like Nitron (www.NitronAdvisors.com) operating in the Enterprise level. They provide search services to help investors for instance find the correct experts. BitWine extends that concept to individuals like me and you.
Thanks
Alon Cohen
Co-Founder of BitWine
alonc
12/29/2006
Posts:1
I had occasion to use Yahoo! Answers. This was the question: "Can you give me a brief description of the Chinese Cultural revolution?"
This was the "best answer -- chosen by voters" --
"A semi illiterate political hack known by the name of MaotseTung decided to bring the rest of the country to his own level. And succeeded by the physical elimination (read- murder) of any and every person whom he considered to be a threat to himself or his self esteem.
By the time he finished some 70 milion died.
Of course if your teacher is a liberal, better not tell him any of the above."
Omnivorous
01/02/2007
Posts:1
zinky_pandey
04/02/2007
Posts:1
shshao
02/06/2008
Posts:1
slicrks505
09/27/2008
Posts:2
slicrks505
09/27/2008
Posts:2
wokiko
01/09/2008
Posts:1
That being said, some of the challenges you dealt with two years ago are still problems with many of the community based answer forums like Yahoo Answers. I believe people just want a simple way to ask questions and get answers without all the other "stuff" that many other sites offer.
answerly
12/17/2008
Posts:1
Our company http://www.webAnswers.com is growing fast and we share advertising revenues with users.
We be more than happy to provide an updated list of popular Q and A sites for your next review.
good5times
05/01/2009
Posts:1
http://similar-site.com/s.php?URL=answers.yahoo.com
correcttheor...
08/16/2009
Posts:1
http://qanda.encyclopedia.com
http://www.answerblip.com
brossvpmedia
10/20/2009
Posts:1