IU's Choice of Search Engine ChaCha "Explained" 94
theodp sends a follow-up to the discussion here a couple of months back about Indiana University librarians and students being forced to use the 'human-powered' ChaCha search engine because IU's President and one of its Trustees were business buddies of ChaCha CEO (and IU alum) Scott Jones. Don't be ridiculous, insisted indignant IU officials. It was ChaCha's ability to fill in gaps in a speech he was writing in 2007 that convinced IU's CIO that the University had to do a deal with ChaCha. What a coincidence, notes Valleywag. The need to fill in gaps in a speech he was writing back in 2005 is what convinced ChaCha CEO Jones that he had to create ChaCha in the first place. Way to anticipate what your customers need before they do.
"Way to anticipate what your customers need" (Score:1, Offtopic)
Snark? (Score:2)
You might also want to look up the real meaning of "snark" while you're at it.
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And while a sufficiently permissive definition of "sarcasm" might include that statement, it really was nothing remotely like good sarcasm.
Re:"Way to anticipate what your customers need" (Score:4, Funny)
Well, to be fair, Jon Stewart's not even John Stewart!
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what's the suprise? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:what's the suprise? (Score:5, Insightful)
While I'm not surprised at all this sort of thing happens this IMO doesn't mean it shouldn't be reported on. Maybe then it'll happen a bit less often.
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Driven by athletics? (Score:2)
Sure its a factor from a marketing perspective, but i dont see it being the big money maker for them. Its number of students that makes the $. Many schools where their athletic programs are nil still rake in the students/profits.
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There's no surprise involved. Cockroaches don't like light, and the internet is a great way to shine it on them.
Although in this case the light is a spotlight of free publicity. I've never even heard of Cha Cha and I went and checked them out just for grins because of this article.
Also to comment on this 'new' type of search engine: A people driven search engine already exists, StumbleOn [stumbleupon.com]. I use it all the time to get more intelligent searches.
speaking of free publicity ... (Score:1)
What the ... ? (Score:4, Interesting)
"Hours".
So he wasted at least TWO HOURS of someone's time looking up a quote? For a SPEECH? And then he asked a DIFFERENT person to look it up, also?
Re:What the ... ? (Score:4, Informative)
That's the point. The waste. (Score:3, Informative)
So that would immediately call into question any of his decisions. He is not capable of determining whether ChaCha is better than Google (or better than just looking it up in the library yourself).
Obligatory car analogy -
If you never drive a car, are you capable of saying Car A is better than Car B based solely upon how fast someone else can pick up your laundry in it?
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There are thousands of CEOs who do don't do anything, or at least, don't do anything beneficial for the organizations they nominally lead. That's obvious enough to anyone, given the present state of corporate America. In fact,
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That depends how much he is paying them - if someone were to pay me $100/hour to look up cheesy phrases for their speech, I'd be quite happy to do it. If they're paying less than $4/hour, on the other hand, I'd prefer to be looking up the cheesy menu for Extra Large McBurgers.
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Flipping burgers in Stavanger pays ~$15-20/hour.
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Besides, if the CEO is paying someone $100/hr to research speeches, he's not paying her to research speeches... unless you consider 'research' to be equal to 'fellatio'.
Seriously, is there anyone in the states that can actually handle a little power without completely losing it? Granted, bad news is the best news, but you never hear about the guy that runs his company/organizatio
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Can you actually live for that in the USA today ? Is it enough to cover even the basics reasonably ? What's the sense of a minimum wage that doesn't even permit a person to become independent ?
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Minimum wage is about $12,000 year.
About a third goes on taxes. Another third will probably go on rent (sharing a two bedroom flat would be around $325/month)
That leaves you with around $4000
A car would cost the second hand car price + licensing/smog tests +
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$5.85/hr for 40hrs/wk (which a lot of people are lucky to get; most places cut you off at 36) is $234/wk, $936/mo, $12,168/yr. Taxes are about 15% at that wage, so you're looking at $10k per year. Nobody really lives on that; it's minimal survival, especially for a 'first-world' country. Housing and food costs vary wildly, but you can expect to pay about 80% of your after-tax income on basic needs (shelter, food, cheap clothes, electricity). Note that this doesn't include medical insurance, car insurance, g
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It's interesting to compare. One thing that strikes me is, in general people say USA have low taxation, whereas for example Norway has high taxes.
But that completely fails to be the case for the lower classes, infact the oposite is true. With a gross-income of $12K in Norway, you would literally pay zero taxes. Not only that: Those zero taxes include full medical-insurance, so the real difference is larger than 15% (how much would medical insurance cost for a person earning $1000/m
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There are probably locales in the U.S. that pay about that, other factors taken into consideration. I'm sure there are some places that pay minimum wage, but they probably can't attract workers. The last time I was in a "minimum wage"-type industry (pizza parlor in the 90s), our starting pay was always 1 or 2 dollars per hour above the minimum wage. Even then, we couldn't keep people at that wage - it was just too easy for them to find another job for a lit
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What!? (Score:4, Funny)
twilight zone (Score:3, Informative)
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"Okay, now, do you guys clean the whole car? Like in the trunk and everything?"
"And can you get out really bad stains, like blood? Cause the trunk is an absolute mess in there."
"And now, you guys don't ask a bunch of invasive questions, right?"
And the woman seemed to be going along fine with it
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He has a couple cds of pranking telemarketers. I know he has one call about a rug cleaning company and him asking about getting blood out of the carpet.
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Thanks for the name and link
Conflict of Interest (Score:5, Insightful)
How does IU pull this off, anyway? Do they actually block Google, Yahoo, etc?
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Re:Conflict of Interest (Score:5, Informative)
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I still think it's boneheaded and a conflict of interest, but let's not exaggerate it into something it's not. Oh wait, this is Slashdot, never mind.
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forced? (Score:1, Insightful)
TFA doesn't explain. Something doesn't add up.
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All the silly names made me laugh (Score:2)
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Internet search engines have weird names...
Re:All the silly names made me laugh (Score:5, Funny)
Thank god for Google - I had no idea how to spell Joanie.
-J
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I think the best part is that ChaCha uses Google ads on its results page.
Ah-ha! (Score:2, Funny)
clock is running -- Can SlashCha beat ChaCha? (Score:1)
qalqashandi sub al-a'sha manuscript location
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on qalqashandi sub al-a'sha manuscript location
Cairo, Egypt would be a good start.
(If you know what library, please reply; thanks!)
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(If you know what library, please reply; thanks!)
It's at the Dar al-Kutub al-Misriyyah [unesco.org], which looks like this [mit.edu].
It's a blatant conflict of interest (Score:4, Interesting)
Whatever the quality of ChaCha, it's not right for him to be on their board, then use IU student resources as well as IU assets to forward this. Jones, inventor of voice mail, needs no free ride from anyone.
Indiana politics smells as bad as politics anywhere, but this is far too close of a relationship, and McRobbie sees nothing wrong with his forceful advocacy of ChaCha. Sure, you can use google or anything you want. But using university resources towards personal profit in this way is onerous and not transparent.
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1) McRobbie was indeed compensated; you think he did ChaCha for free?
2) Of course not; he's not President until Oct 18th. Nah, just another university official (as interim) doing the wrong thing
3) Two wrongs don't make a right. Look at how much Stanford has sucked down both private and federal funds. The articles over the years stagger the mind, of just how much Stanford can be as a black hole for cash-- in the name of 'development'.
4) That's what I said and
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Now, let's get an audit for full exposure and transparency. Then let's recind this relationship so as to for once and all remove all possible taints, and use an arms-length method to employ this dictum on IU's campuses.
1) I don't believe IU, and this quid pro quo relationship has to end if it's to be transparent. Let Scot Jones get his own money and good will to make the endeavor work. Using IU resources to benefit Scot Jones is much like building a stadium for Jim Irsay with tax dollars. Oh, wait....
2
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Too bad that society doesn't reward your particular skills better. If they did, you likely woul
Here then.... (Score:2)
>> An Indianapolis technology business and Indiana University have announced a partnership.
Ok, there's a partnership. See the next sentence.
>> The partnership will use IU's library and information technology staff in a Carmel-based Internet search engine that uses experts as "guides" through techniques including instant messaging.
Uh, let's see. IU's l
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Okay, what if it were true that McRobbie really didn't accept any compensation whatsoever from ChaCha? Would that change the color of the situation? And I really do mean NO COMPENSATION. If it were absolutely TRUE, would it factor into your thinking? BTW, public representations from both IU and ChaCha are that there has been no compensation to McRobbie ever.
And IF this really were a research-oriented "strategic alliance" in the truest sense, where
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Vetting the situation requires, unfortunately for Jones and McRobbie, startling clarity and an ugly audit. Provided brilliant-- no, crystaline-- results, subsequent dicta needs to be fully transparent. The merest hint of personal gain on McRobbie's part at either taxpayer or student cost taints this and/or subsequent research endeavors. McRobbie makes a great if controversial salary in a time of fiscal difficulties in Indian
1. Exploit your workforce 2. Screw your users (Score:1)
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I would say BIAS alert, since my mother was a lawyer responsible for the startup of ChaCha and she actually showed it to me when it was in venture capital mode and you needed a password to access it... but I guess my statement really has nothing to do with any of that.
In MySpace... (Score:2)