|
You won't be able to ask Jeeves, the butler that made the search engine now known as Ask.com famous in the late '90s. But in a bid to engage more users, Ask is returning to its question-and-answer roots by tapping its users and the Web. Ask is now building a community of users that ask and answer questions, while continuing to use its technology to find and rank answers on the Web. Answers from both sources will pop up on Ask's results page. There's nothing new about farming out questions to individuals online. Yahoo Answers has done this for years, and Ask already has an "Ask Answers" feature that gives users answers from "experts" and around the Web. But newer services such as Aardvark and Quora have helped reinvigorate the premise: Search giant Google Inc., which used to run a service where hired researchers answeredquestions from paying users, sees so much promise in community-based Q&A that it bought Aardvark in February. Ask Networks President Scott Garell said his site is concentrating more on Q&A because it can be hard to find good answers to questions that are time-sensitive, objective and complex using a more conventional search engine like Google. The site's hope is to eventually give users the answers they're looking for 90 percent of the time (it's currently about 60 percent). A big part of accomplishing this will depend on the quality of the answers its users can provide through its new Q&A community. Ask has been building up a stockpile ofquestions and answers from users in a private testing phase this year and allowed anyone to request an invitation to participate starting Tuesday. Tony Gentile, Ask's senior vice president for product management, said many questions being asked online revolve around how one should spend time or money or make a difficult decision. Ask, which is owned by Internet company IAC/InterActiveCorp, routes questions to users who identify themselves as experts on specific subjects. To get the best answers, users vote on them; those getting enough positive votes would eventually trickle into search results. And if you claim to be, say, an expert in space travel but consistently give answers that users find erroneous or unhelpful, Ask will stop routing that type of question to you. |
Tags: Ask.com , Jeeves , websites
Ask.com Brings New Dimension to Web Search
Phones That Tell You Where to Drive, Meet, Eat
IAC To Launch Location-Based Search
Ask Launches City-wise Search Engine
Ask.com's Ditching The Search Engine Path, Going Back to Q&A
Religious websites more prone to malware than porn sites, finds report
The latest "should they-shouldn't they" event with Facebook is the lift of the minimu...
Leaked Images, Availability, Pricing,
Specs, Pre-order
Mobile Money: All you need to know
‘Mobile Money’ has been striving to become a known term, but for many...
Five ways to access blocked Internet sites
The internet is a vast expanse and there’s a ton of information out...
After eons of speculations, rumours and what not, Google Drive has finally
By Karan Shah

Sony to roll-out ICS update next week, Xperia PLAY gets the boot
Vn Verma
Sat May 26, 23:24:20
Dell Latitude 10, first Windows 8 tablet shows up
Atul Malhotra
Sat May 26, 23:11:11
Google Nexus tablet to be unveiled at Google I/O 2012
Atul Malhotra
Sat May 26, 23:09:02
Sony to roll-out ICS update next week,...
BlackBerry Curve 9320 announced in India...
Microsoft VP talks about Ballmer's...
Cisco won't invest in their Android...


















Mixx
Facebook
Twitter
Digg
delicious
reddit
MySpace
StumbleUpon
LinkedIn






























































_011517074205_160x90.jpg)















