no.stupid.answers

no.stupid.answers

WikiAnswers folks on the radio today!

July 20th, 2008 . by Liz

From Will 00, one of the WikiAnswers Supervisors:

Hello All! Today, Sunday, there will be a special show on WJPM Radio interviewing Matthew and Deb (Administrators at WikiAnswers). We will open the phone lines to allow others to talk about anything they like on WikiAnswers or related to it. (The phone number is (347) 826 9850.) You may also email us at show @ wjpmradio.com to have us report what you emailed us.

The show should be live at 1:30 PM CST/2:30 PM Eastern Time at http://blogtalkradio.com/WJPM.

So come on by and listen to some super Supervisors chat it up! Including yours truly.

UPDATE: Here is the link to the radio show… Thanks to all the callers and to Will 00!

Answers.com CEO on the Sherif Show!

December 8th, 2007 . by Liz

Sherif Hedayat, a comedian from Dayton, Ohio, came out halfway across the world to visit the head honcho at Answers Corp and get an interview.

Ok, maybe he didn’t venture here just to meet with Bob Rosenschein… But Sherif did make Bob the centerpiece in his sixth webisode of The Sherif Show. Check it out:

Hey, it was a tough question, alright? We just provide the answers, we don’t make ‘em up… well, most of the time.

Company love… in Hebrew!

November 26th, 2007 . by Liz

Yours truly was interviewed for an article in Globes, a fancy-shmancy Israeli business finance newspaper. The article covered Facebook applications, and as you know, we’ve released quite a few in the past few months.

Unfortunately for most of us out there, it’s in Hebrew… But the gist is about why and how we made Facebook applications based on Answers.com trivia and WikiAnswers Q&A. I’ve included some of my answers to the reporter’s questions in English below (not necessarily appearing like this in the article):

I work for Answers Corp, a U.S. and Israel-based company leading the world of online answers with Answers.com, a site with over 4 million reference topics, and WikiAnswers, the leading community-driven Q&A wiki. Both sites have content that I thought was worth sharing – we all need answers, right?

We wanted to create a way to allow Facebook users to put Answers.com trivia and WikiAnswers Q&A on their profiles, allowing friends to ask and answer questions or learn new facts, updated daily. That’s where Dapper comes in. Dapper, an exciting new Web 2.0 company, makes it easy to extract content from any site and reuse it elsewhere. They recently developed a way to create Facebook apps from any website content (in beta), which is how we’ve been creating these apps. We’re working closely with them as early adopters of their technology.

I chose topics for the apps that I thought would appeal to different people with diverse interests; for instance, there’s a Music Q&A app, perfect for people who are into music trivia, a Sports Q&A app for sports enthusiasts, and so forth. What you get is an app in your profile listing unanswered trivia questions, which anyone who can view your profile is invited to click and answer on WikiAnswers.

It’s also great for students, who were Facebook’s original audience. They can add Q&A apps relating to their studies (law, health, money) and test their knowledge, help others learn or even ask questions of their own.

Aside from Q&A apps, there are also a bunch of trivia apps as well: Quote of the Day, Wine Word of the Day, Today’s Birthdays (see below for URLs). There is also another app – the first we did - developed by Dapper that includes Word of the Day and Today in History (here).