ASK ME NOW (IF YOU JUST CAN'T WAIT TIL LATER) Pubblico Deposited

Contenuto dell'articolo
  • The E-Sylum: Volume 8, Number 43, October 9, 2005, Article 22

    ASK ME NOW (IF YOU JUST CAN'T WAIT TIL LATER)

    On October 5, 2005 article by Walter Mossberg in the Wall
    Street Journal notes: "If you're one of those people who thinks
    he's always right, but can't prove it on the spot, we might have
    just the technology for you.

    This week, my assistant Katie Boehret and I tested a new
    service called AskMeNow that attempts to be like a digital
    version of Who Wants to Be a Millionaire's phone-a-friend.
    This service works by answering questions of all sorts in just a
    few minutes for free, or in some cases for 49 cents per question."

    "Its concept is very straightforward: You send questions to
    the service by calling from your cellphone or emailing directly
    from a portable smartphone, and answers are sent back to your
    phone or hand-held via Short Messaging Services (SMS) or
    email within about a minute."

    "To answer your questions, the company employs real people
    who sit at computers in the Philippines, furiously researching
    the Internet (using data from content partnerships) trying to
    respond to your queries within three minutes. This doesn't
    always mean the response is correct. It simply means that the
    retrieved information was online somewhere. But our results
    proved rather accurate."

    "To start using AskMeNow, users must go to its Web site,
    www.askmenow.com, to enter sign-up information including
    your name, ZIP Code, country and cellphone number;"

    We asked some tough questions like, "Where are the Rolling
    Stones playing tonight in Washington, D.C.?" and "Why do
    men have nipples?" But we got accurate responses to both.
    Katie even tried a snarky question: Why are girls smarter than
    boys? But the response just said that her question was
    unanswerable due to editorial policy."

    To read the full article, see Full Story

    [So, any of you smarty-pants readers care to submit some
    numismatic research questions and report back on the
    accuracy of the results? Will the Phillipino research staff
    come through? There is an awful lot of numismatic information
    available on the web now. Ask the right question, and the
    answer may be found in the E-Sylum archives. What is a
    Panamint Ball, for instance? -Editor]

URL di origine Data di pubblicazione
  • 2005-10-09
Volume
  • 8

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Autore NNP