Is eHow Full of Stupid People, or What?
14 April, 2009 at 1:33 pm | In eHow, experts, idiot, stupidity | Leave a CommentTags: eHow, experts, idiot, stupidity
Following is my annotated list of the Top Requested How To Articles, based on eHow’s list as of 14 April:
Please write an article explaining:
- How to land an ultralight aircraft (requested on April 7): answer quick, somebody; the poor guy’s been circling for a week now!
- How to build an addition on a house: and you want an answer in 5-600 words?
- How to insulate your basement floor: Get a giant crane, lift the house, and stick insulation under it.
- How to dig a fish pond: step 1) get a shovel. step 2) dig a hole
- How to de-thatch lawn grass, how to get rid of thatch, how to thatch a lawn: I’m sensing a trend here…
- How to make a Persian rug: step 1) find a Persian weaver…
Oh, lordy, these people are hilarious!
Is eHow full of shit? If nothing else, they’re censoring their site.
26 February, 2009 at 8:19 pm | In censorship, eHow, experts, stupidity | Leave a CommentTags: censorship, eHow, expert, idiot, stupd
Got an email from eHow recently explaining to me that they’re deleting content that… ummm…. I guess, doesn’t fit with their image of themselves. Oh, sure, they coated it all in blather about how they were removing spam, plagiarized content, and “cloned” articles. You can see their blog entry here explaining that they’re just trying to maintain quality content (though I maintain that any person who’s ever closely inspected information about his or her own field will doubt the “quality” part of that content).
That’s neither here nor there – until they start censoring information they don’t like. Here’s an exchange in the above-mentioned blog’s comments:
“Unsuitable content: This is the SECOND time I’ve gotten this notice on this same, exact article. No one, including some of the top eHow authors, Rich, and apparently the editorial staff, was able to tell me what was wrong with it the first time, and so they said check spelling and republish. I did. Now today, it has been put into draft again for “unsuitable content”. I STILL have NO IDEA what could POSSIBLY be wrong with this article!!!!!!! Please READ it and enlighten me so that I can “correct” it once and for all.”
The answer comes later:
The problem AJ with the article is that while it is excellent it mentions and accepts TUBE feeding (as do most vets who will instruct). Ehow editors have consistently pulled articles about tube feeding puppies in the past due to the risks to puppies. They feel it is dangerous information.
Errrm… OK, the writing is atrocious (as is much of what’s on the site) but it appears to say that veterinarians – people who’ve spent years being educated for their specialty – say that the so-called TUBE feeding [sic] is an acceptable technique, but eHow’s soi-disant experts, the Editors, don’t think it is. Just how full of themselves are these people?
I should add that I posted twice to the comment section on that blog, and the moderators haven’t seen fit to allow either to be seen by the public. Clearly, eHow censors wherever it can.
The first post, placed 24 Feb, says:
Wow. What a load of horse-puckey. If you want to clean up eHow, why not start by getting rid of all the dead-weight rubbish vomited onto the site by people scurrying to become “experts.” As a professional in (none of your business), I cringe at the content I see regarding my own field. I can’t say that I trust anything I see on eHow without independent verification!
eHow, your site needs a good kick in the ass.
Rex’s Continuing Adventures with AT&T U-verse
6 January, 2009 at 3:10 pm | In U-Verse, television | Leave a CommentTags: AT&T, cable television, television, U-Verse
a diary, if you will…
see all of my thoughts about U-Verse: “The U Stands for Underwhelming!”
January 3-4, 2009: the “Guide” says nothing but “information not available,” and it says it on every last channel on the main TV.
January 4, 2009: The remote for the bedroom lost its programming for the television. Again.
January 4, 2009: surfed to the AT&T website, found nothing in the “help-yourself” knowledge base about “guide.” Gave up.
January 5, 2009: called their damned 1-800-288-2020 number. It took three tries to get to the right department. Is it just me, or does that stupid voice-recognition guy seem to be hard of hearing? They told me they’d call me at home. I told them I was –> <– this close to leaving their stupid residential gateway on the curb in front of the house. In the rain.
January 5, 2009: performed the old “warm reboot” on the television with the DVR. It took fifteen minutes to come back up completely, but now the “guide” is back.
January 6, 2009: why do they call it “Weather on Demand”? It’s clearly “Weather When We Feel Like It”? It was faster to fire up the laptop and surf to weather.com than to use that stupid channel 227!
January 19, 2009: two of the three (and maybe all three, I haven’t looked) remotes have now “forgotten” the television they were programmed to operate. I’ve given up and now just keep the television’s remote next to the AT&T controller. Sheesh – what a waste of time…
February 5, 2009: television via the residential gateway spontaneously turned off, but the television remained “on” and the internet connection wasn’t interrupted - the remote was twenty feet from the nearest mammal at the time.
February 6, 2009: when trying to record to DVR: the first time you log into the UVerse site, it prints gibberish on the screen and informs you that you’ve just logged out, so you have to log out and back in again. FO course after all that crap, when you attempt to reach the on-line recording setup, you get the dreaded “Your request cannot be completed at this time. Please try again later.” message.
Why do I bother with this crappy service?
April 13, 2009: the remmotes have all reprogrammed themselves and forgotten what television they’re supposed to control… again.
More as it comes in…
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