Month: May 2009

Microblogging About Anime

Posted by - May 20, 09

In light of getting thoughts out quickly, microblogging anime series [or any media] is quite the handy thing. More than anything it resembles what we now call scrobbling. The difference is, that scrobbling is a miniature instance of experience logging, with no thoughts attached.

When we scrobble-blog (micro-updating on media titles) we can and do include our thoughts as well as the instance of experience (whether it is logged depends on the platform). Oh what a nice combination. Here’s a view of what it looks like on twitter (I added the highlighting and labels, to make it more apparent).

Previously, reflections were my main destination of media updates, but I’ve hardly posted anything of length in recent months. No, it has been mostly this scrobble-blogging. But, is this a good solution? Let’s see….

Evaluation

  • When we scrobble-blog, does the system mark the given title as experienced in some way, or add it to a list?
  • Are updates organized by media-category and title?
  • Are titles standardized, readable, unabbreviated, and relevant in these updates?
  • Can we avoid including the title or abbreviation in the content of the message?
  • Is there a way in which we can see what we post the most updates on, whether it be for a specific title or a type of media in general?
  • Is there a way in which we can see what our friends post the most updates on?
  • Can we hide some updates while making others available for everyone, such as having all media updates be available to everyone, while personal updates are available only to friends?
  • Can we be expressive in our updates (bold/italic/strike, bigger or smaller font)?

So, where does your microblog stand?

Notes

My cat is asleep on the futon D: I like having my own micro-scrobblings organized by blog reading, anime, music, or other media. I like using bold and italics. I like having the full message available without considering the length of the title I’m posting about. I also like being able to hide events from other’s streams, but still have it visible when they look at my updates. Etc, etc, etc.

Receiving Recommendations

Posted by - May 19, 09

Some API shots

Reverse Rec

The objective is to have these readily available next to an experience list.

Reverse Rec

[method]

More…

The Honor of 10

Posted by - May 15, 09

usagijen managed a great mixture of closing thoughts and defense of her giving Darker than Black a 10 [out of 10]. I added my own response, but ghostlightning pointed to one of coburn’s December posts which I recall, but never managed to respond to a second time. There were good points made:

Jen:

My 10 is greater than your 10

This is a duality in truth.

moritheil:

A rating is always subjective.

I suppose concur, or rather, no matter how objective one may deem their rating, we must still take it as a subjective stance :( Nothing wrong here, the Narutos of the world will still get their 1’s and 10’s… it keeps spinning /whoosh so why do ratings matter at all on a system-wide scope? I have arguments, but not the point of this entry.

ghostlightning:

People are subjective to be sure, and the ratings we give on MAL I think serve as icebreakers in opening discussions more than anything.

This goes beyond the way (the rating system 10/10 or relative, matters not). Discussions are about thoughts, possibly streams of them. This goes hand in hand that a rating list only goes so far when trying to inspect the individual. An organized history of thoughts are a nice reference point in doing so.

Senna:

I know people who won’t even give their favorite series a 10/10 because “it’s not perfect;” I think that’s silly

I concur, though just as interesting is someone’s highest-ranked title. It’s just not very interesting when it shares the same position with 20 other works.

Finally, coburn’s followups:

I agree that relative-tiered levelling is more accurate in dealing with the broad range of shows out there – especially at the lower ends of the scale. Especially in that some people will be stricter than others depending on their personal aims in rating shows.

Ah yes, notice this statement on strictness will apply to any rating system. People who rate differently, should be allowed (and possibly encouraged) to use different scales. coburn does, in fact, understand the system.

Still the lack of a magic symbolic 10/10 doesn’t quite click with my actual experience. My favourites really do mean that much more to me. Maybe I’d have to include a couple of empty theoretical tiers to segregate them from the crowd.

Ah yes, the magic of 100%. I’ve come to the realization, that this is only possibly in relative ratings if the user keeps a 10-level system, but again, possibly more interesting is what appears at the top, regardless of level. Y/N? A top 10 list is rather wicked, but something tells me people wouldn’t mind seeing top 20 or top 100 as well. I feel a correlation with ratings is in order.

Secondly, empty null/void-tiers, it has been pondered. This is not an issue, the current system has a switch which removes empty tiers, disabling is quite simple. The issue is exploiting such a thing, but extreme ratings should usually be thrown out anyway. As compensation, the current calculation algorithm is non-linear, meaning higher tiers have a greater weight/position than lower tiers (the mathematical significance of a rating becomes less important on the way down).

TheBigN:

I do get annoyed when people strongly force comparisons between two anime shows, as if the shows were specifically made to fight against each other, when that’s not the case.

Back to coburn:

TheBigN: I reckon the advantage of doing things out of 10, as opposed to something like Ryan suggests, is that the extent to which shows are in combat with one another is reduced.

It is relative because the items are ranked relative to each other… this is Sparta, jk.

There are two ways to go about this. 1) Whether we like it or not, a 10-point system is relative, but abstracted from the direct comparison between the experiences/works. If someone gives two titles a 5 and a 7, there is inference of comparison. 2) Ratings are quite 1-dimensional, which is good reason to include annotation when rating. This preferably should not involve comparison between works, because the rating already expresses the outcome.

The fundamental nature of rating is comparison. How an individual rates, whether through abstracted grading or direct comparison likely will differ. The dimension of the ratings will likely differ as well; the overall experience vs storytelling+production, etc. What is important to notice in all of this is that both fixed and relative rating systems can be used for any dimension or grading style. If we substitute the word “unbounded” or “dynamic” for “relative,” the hard difference becomes the ability of a user to create their own rating system, or not.

With that said, I realized this rating system requires a different mindset about how we numerically categorize our media experiences, but once the consensus releases the ingrained concept of 10/10 ratings and realizes the backwards compatibility of relative ratings, both RRS and fixed-point systems will reach a more meaningful realization.

More…

When @ Fails

Posted by - May 14, 09

Recently, twitter changed something in their @ operator handling. Though it was news to me, there was previously an option which allowed users to view their friends’ updates which were replies to non-mutual friends. Since around July of 2008, my account had automatically hidden replies of this nature, but I have realized a flaw in the new changes. Something painful.

Before I get into that, I’ll just say that some users are irritated by this modification, but from a developer’s point-of-view, twitter’s reasoning is rather sound on the grand scale. Naturally, if I were to implement it I would do it a bit differently, allowing those who follow a reasonable number of users an option to see these replies, while limiting this feature for those who either follow 3-5000+ users or the followers of those with 3-5000+ followers. In essence, it’s more efficient if new-twitter was a place where everyone was following and being followed by 10k people (god, the whole following bla bla is so geh… SUBSCRIPTIONS). That’s off the topic.

Today, once these things were in order, I realized something in my replies, or rather what was in the list of replies and not in the home view. Previously, I would see replies for all @nuclearsurprise, which still stands, but I cannot recall any time where someone I was following included @nuclearsurprise and it did not turn up in my home view. Do we see where this is going?

This happened today, when owen_s, a user I follow, mentioned @nuclearsurpise in one of his updates, a non-mutual reply to omomomo. Now why on earth did this not show up in my view? And still these updates will not show up in my follower stream, which leads me to believe either something is off in this new implementation or this is the way it is supposed to work (I’m covering all feasible grounds here, as I don’t expect a group with millions in backing to fuck up… but then again).

So given that users cannot see these non-mutual replies is whatever, but why, oh why, does this happen on non-mutual replies which include a follower’s nick?

I don’t think it was supposed to happen that way.

Not Dropping Spring

Posted by - May 13, 09

Call it M, or whatever, but with Spring in full-assault, I really don’t feel like dropping anything; I’m pleased with the mix. So though I won’t be dropping, I’ve purposely moved a couple series to the backlog (while others have wound up there from finals week v_v/sad).

Fullmetal Alchemist: Brotherhood

I still can’t believe corporate is calling this Brotherhood. Seriously, wtf, the damn show does not even mention Brotherhood anywhere. Small issue lol.

METAL

The real reason to backlog this is much in the same as 2008’s Xamdou; batch viewing. Naturally, I pretty much get the gist of FMA after the 2003 series, and I hear this one may stick to the manga material I’m unfamiliar with, fab, but…

At the moment, single-episode viewing is sort of meh, even with the extra-ordinary pacing. Sincerely, Bro, I’d rather watch 4-6 at at time.

Pandora Hearts

[this blank saves your eyes from anything that may have been considered a screencap]

Awesome Alice premise. Not sure about wonderland crossover, but this series has taken my interest even with the horrid rip/raw/4:3 and subgroups making 720p from SD (yes, sometimes we must invest in new lolmeters). I’ve viewed 3 episodes, they did get better with progress.

Anyway, I feel this would also be worthwhile in batches (The B in Backlog stands for Batch, right?). Somewhere in the first couple episodes I thought it was much too slow with details, but it turns out the pacing is rather nice, and that bothers me if Hearts is going to be a single-season swinger (13 weeks). SO, 綺麗なビデオよりを待たなければならないんです。(I think that particle needs to be moved :/).

Summer Storm

ARASHI

It was likely apparent that I would be watching this come June. I have absolutely no qualm with the series, as I enjoyed the first episode jump-in. The character designs were awkward from some angles, but its a minor viewer adjustment imo. As I am not familiar with the source material, I’ll assume this a sort of slice mix comedy seeing the first episode hinted some good details, but hardly any indication of plot. Summertime~

Basically everything else is cool, but I’m about 3 4 weeks behind in half the stuff I sampled from the premiers; roughly 24 episodes combined. Yup, tomorrow at 4pm I bounce out of Uni for Summer. This post was written over a week ago D:

More…

Influenced Path of Experience

Posted by - May 11, 09

So I was playing around in Google Reader with the recently established stream feed on melative, when I saw some comments flowing in on usagi’s lively Cross Game post. ghostlightning mentioned my name, and it grabbed my attention. He touched on the relation of behavior and decisions which occur, leading to a newly found anime endeavor; given, it could/should be generalized for just about every type of media.

Rather than deeply ponder the thoughts, I’ll just start by having a representation of my own order of influence when it comes to taking on a series I may have never given time.

First, the mentioned sources:

  • a - Direct/RL Recommendation
  • b - [Professional] Internet Review
  • c - Blogger Review
  • d - Blogger Season Preview/Hype/Pimp
  • e - Blogger twitter (why not anyone else?)
  • f - Blogger Direct Recommendation
  • g - Comment/Reader Recommendations
  • h - Forum Discussion

Perhaps the most interesting thing about this list is that bloggers play a big part. I think it is an incomplete list with regard to every single viewer out there and every way of recommending.

Here’s probably how I would rank:

  1. a+f - I know a very small set of non-blogger anime watchers; I like bloggers.
  2. c - I like bloggers.
  3. g - If I get them, it happens.
  4. d+e - Quite passive on previews; just like seeing the pre-take. I casually skim tweets unless I’m there at the time, and it’s basically impossible to see impressions on one series among those I follow (without searching PLEASE!).
  5. h+b - Forums are messy, pro. anime reviews seem out-of-touch; I do like user reviews. (I have regard for some awesome old AnimeNFO user reviews)

So there are two sides of the situation, when we take a recommendation/suggestion and when we leave it, which is a bit interesting if we want to formulate an algorithm which maps this non-self influence of the experience. The benefit also has two sides answering the questions: 1) how does the viewer’s decisions on experience relate to recommendations? 2) what source has the greatest sway over listeners?

Developing a media-centric web-framework has it’s perks, and I may begin writing a solution in the near future; sooner if it seems immediately useful.

More…

Popular Title Topics

Posted by - May 2, 09

topics

A feat the twitter cannot accomplish. So what’s the answer, why?

Note

The image is a screen capture of a live page in Firefox. The data represents the most updated topics among a user’s friends. Example data.