After closing Google Answers last year, Google launched a new version of the service, this time only in Russian (here's the English translation, powered by Google Translate). Unlike the original Google Answers, there are no hired experts and people don't have to pay to ask questions. Instead, you use your points to "pay" for a question and you earn points by posting answers or rating other people's answers. If your answer gets bad ratings, you lose points.
When you start to type a question, Google shows related questions in a sidebar to prevent the problem of duplication. You can set the number of points you are willing to offer for the right answer and the number of days the question remains active. Each question needs to have a list of labels, so it's easy to find related questions.
To find a question to answer, you can perform a search, browse the most recent questions or subscribe to the labels that match your interests. You can't add an answer after a question is closed.
The service has a pretty smart system for rewarding good answers. Each user can rate up to 20 answers a day. For answering a question you get 2 points, but if your answer gets 5 stars, you'll earn 10, 20 or 30 points depending on the number of people that rated your answer. You also get 5, 10 or 15 points for a 4-star answer, 1-3 points for a 3-star answer. For a bad rating, you lose between 3 and 15 points.
The blog of 3form, another free knowledge exchange service, reviews Google's new Q&A site:
"It is remarkable that Google had chosen Russia to test the new service, as Russia is the country where the concept of this kind of service originated. (...) After a quick look at the new Google Q&A service I can say that technologically it closely resembles Naver and Yahoo Answers. I found the main differences in reward structure, style, and user interface. Google seems to have a cleaner user interface, that would be a reason to prefer the Google service over others everything else being equal. The effectiveness of such social search services depends on the community of participants they attract and the efficiency of the technology supporting the exchange of knowledge. Among two technologically very similar services, like those provided by Yahoo and Google, the one that will be able to build a more diverse and motivated community of participants will be able to provide a better service to them."
If successful, Google Q&A could expand globally. For the moment, Yahoo Answers is the most visited Q&A site in the US, with 96% market share in December 2006, according to Hitwise. Yahoo heavily promoted its service and managed to create a strong community.
{ via Google Blogoscoped }
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Now if only this has an english version.
ReplyDeleteUntil now I still wonder if killing Google answers was the right answer to whatever problem Google has with the product. Turning it into a paid, ask an expert service to a free one just like what Yahoo has with Answers could have been a better option.
Based on what you have “discovered” so far about this Google answers, things are looking pretty interesting. And I like the part where questions related to yours is shown in the sidebar. This will lower the number of duplicate questions. Yahoo Answers also has this feature though.
The use of tags though is pretty interesting, as opposed to what Answers has – a fixed set of categories. Tags is web 2.0 categories, though still really useful, somehow limits the flexibility of how people can organize information, or in this case, questions.
This sounds to be 1-on-1 to Yahoo Answers (answers.yahoo.com)
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