Unsuggester: Finding the Book You'll Never Want 164
Selanit writes "Lots of socially-oriented sites provide suggestions for things you might like based on user-provided data. But how many can claim to offer you things you'll probably hate? LibraryThing, the social book-cataloging site, has used its database of personal libraries to create UnSuggester, which does exactly that. You type in a book you like, "It analyzes the seven million books LibraryThing members have recorded as owned or read, and comes back with books least likely to share a library with the book you suggest." For example, apparently readers of Edward Said's "Orientalism" rarely purchase "Ella Enchanted" by Gail Carson Levine. Who'd have thought? Quirky though it may be, the tool seems an interesting way to broaden your horizons. If you're a hidebound, crufty old fogey, I un-recommend it!"
'Tis the Season (Score:5, Funny)
I'm not so sure about that... (Score:5, Funny)
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(I would check, but the site has been
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Incidentally if you're looking for a good read, an
Re:I'm not so sure about that... (Score:4, Funny)
I _never_ found the _underscore_ as _annoying_ as it is in _your_post_.
Re:I'm not so sure about that... (Score:4, Funny)
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I mean, they've been caught doing everything else.
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As I suspected though, the contents of my bookshelf are as schizophrenic as I thought--I've got books that are unsuggestions sitting just a few feet apart on my bookshelves. My general feeling is that to be a well-rounded person, you've got to read as widely as possible (though I'm more than I li
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1. Christian books are very popular, especially the ones with wide denominational appeal
2. Many people who read them don't read very many other books, and conversely it may seem that library hogs don't enjoy Max Lucado and Philip Yancey...
So very many books give Christian literature as books you won't enjoy. You see the same effect (but to a lesser degree) to other books that are primarily read by a segment of the population, such as programming books.
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I'm unique! (Score:4, Funny)
Re:I'm unique! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I'm unique! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I'm unique! (Score:5, Funny)
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ARGH!!! (Score:2)
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-nB
What's next? (Score:3, Funny)
What's next? Social misanthropy sites?
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uh oh (Score:2)
I made that once. (Score:5, Funny)
In reverse... (Score:3, Interesting)
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I guess you could use it for the obvious use in that by stating what you like you may get a list of other books to avoid.
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OK..... (Score:5, Funny)
Zen Buddhism --- War in 3 Easy Steps
Idiots Guide to become a Stock Broker --- Honor and Ethics
The Holy Bible --- Pedophiles in our World
Guide to Windows Vista --- Kama Sutra
The Holy Bible --- Pedophiles in our World (Score:2)
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Re:The Holy Bible --- Pedophiles in our World (Score:5, Funny)
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Unless you're Catholic...
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I don't see why these would be particularly opposed - aren't they they're both about getting screwed in as many different ways as possible...? :-P
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Zen And The Art of Motocylce Maintenance -x- Windows XP Annoyances
The Elegant Universe -x- C++ for Dummies
We Were Soldiers Once, and Young -x- Bush At War
The Bible (as interpreted by me) -x- The Bible (as interpreted by you)
The 9/11 Commision Report -x- My Pet Goat
The Constitution of The United States -x- Kafka's The Trial, or The USA PATRIOT Act
The Tao of Pooh -x- Walt Disney Corporation Annual Shareholder's Report
Slow or slashdotted...? (Score:2, Funny)
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It's uncanny! (Score:1, Funny)
Or.. (Score:1)
Lisp and Wuthering Heights? (Score:4, Funny)
Although, to tell the truth, although I've programmed in many languages, and read Wuthering Heights, I've never actually programmed in Lisp... may be there's something to this...
yup (Score:2)
Don't really care for Lisp (more of a PROLOG kinda guy).
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My favorite was the "My Life: Bill Clinton" contrasted with "Don't Waste Your Life". So, did Bill Clinton waste his life, or is the reading of his book a waste of our own? :-)
Doesn't work for me either. (Score:2)
I typed in the name of this book I'm reading currently, "White Mughals", and found DNA's H2G2 on the list, in addition to other sci-fi works like Dune, and surprisingly enough, Shakespeare's Midsummer's Night Dream.
I suppose I'm a statistical anomaly, in that I'm interested in medieval Indian history, modernist English literature and in contemporary science-fiction, but I've read, and loved, all books mentioned (or wanted to read "Dune"; have read the rest).
King vs Pratchett (Score:4, Interesting)
I was going to toss Pratchett in there and see if King was the result, but with the slashdotting of the site, I think that will have to wait..
I must remind myself to never get listed on the frontpage of slashdot...
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Well, one can't always predict when one will become slashdotted... And preventing such an occurance isn't something that is likely high on anyones list... While I would like to believe that every site I've worked on is worthy of pla
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Wyrd Sisters results in a bunch of Christian evangelicalish stuff, some of which is not totally dissimilar to some of what's on my shelves (I have an interest in ecclesiastical history.)
While this is a kinda clever marketing idea--see what you hate!--I'm doubtful about the underlying logic. For one, some of us are really ecelectic: I own works ranging from de Sade t
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The logic is similar, but the statistics are a lot harder to generate in this case because the probability of non-ownership of any given book by any given person is extremely high. So they need to collect much more data than Amazon does to answer the question they are answering.
Added to your Google Book Search (Score:1)
I'd rather see a system based on ratings... (Score:4, Interesting)
I've purchased many books it turned out I didn't like, and I didn't recommend.
I'd rather see a "You liked these books, which indicate the following books may also be for you, and the other books here won't be as interesting, based on reviews of other users."
Rather than a "Users who bought this book also bought that book!"
I dunno, say something that takes your oppinion on a book, such as:
"Book A", 8 of 10
and then comes up with:
The top three books for people who gave "Book A" an 8 of 10 are:
"Book B"
"Book C"
"Book D"
The bottom three are:
"Book E"
"Book F"
"Book G"
The top three books for people who gave "Book A" greater than 5 out of 10 are:
"Book B"
"Book H"
"Book I"
hmm... slashdotters unite! We could make this!
Re:I'd rather see a system based on ratings... (Score:4, Interesting)
that explains all the email I get :-D (Score:4, Funny)
How about... (Score:3, Funny)
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Digg's been up and running for a while now.
Ahem.
My Unsuggestion was: "Vogue Knitting on the Go: Socks". I'd say that's more spot on than the recommendations I get. The worst recommender, by far, that I've ever seen is Ticketmaster. I unwittingly got a few emails from them and there seemed to be no rhyme or reason to their recommendations. "Don't miss Beck! Don't miss Rod Stewart! Don't miss the Haitian Steel Drum Comedy Troupe! Don't
Moo (Score:1)
It probably works! (Score:1)
Re:It probably works! (Score:5, Funny)
You may be on to something there.
Given a choice, I'd much rather read 'Knitting on the Road' then suffer through Tolkien again.
---While knitting on the road on her journey to Gandalung, wending solemnly through the treachorous passes of Orkdell, Nancy espied a riotous figure approaching from the shadowy North, wherein dwelt the Elves of Glimmersill.
"Greetings Knitting Lady of the Road", addressed the stout and sturdy figure, "allow me the honour of addressing you and giving you an 800 page recitation of my lineage."
It's all the other way around: the Da Vinci Code (Score:3, Interesting)
I typed in "Da vinci code" and it came back with (amongst others) two Lisp books and Knuth's Art of Programming (3 volumes). If that isn't a good alternative to world famous besteller author Dan Brown's biggest cash cow...
"Books you don't need in a place you can't find" (Score:5, Interesting)
Another good place is the New England Mobile Book Fair. [nebookfair.com] The fact that the "mobile book fair" is a huge, stationary building tips you off that there's something quirky here. This huge bookstore in Newton, Massachusetts is only good for two things: finding one specific title, or pursuing utter serendipity.
Its slogan should be "Books you can't find in a place that has them all." OK, it doesn't have all of them, but your chances of finding a specific title there are way higher than at Barnes and Noble.
You see, for unknown reasons--I assume the bulk of their business must be supplying schools or something--their books are organized, first by binding (paper or hardbound); then, by publisher; and, within publisher, by title. You don't realize how bizarre this is until you experience it. After all, even if you know the title you often don't know the publisher, so the first step in finding any specific book is to look it up in their electronic copy of Books In Print.
Once you've found the book, even if you are curious about other books by the same author and are correct in suppose they're published by the same publisher, you still can't find them because they're not alphabetized by title.
Oh, and did I mention that they double-shelve their books, so even if you know the binding, publisher, title and they have it, it may not be visible on the shelf?
Strange... (Score:2)
Music Bizarro (Score:2)
I tried to do something similar in concept the other day, clicking around last.fm [www.last.fm] in search of someone with whom I did not share a single common artist.
The closest I got was one MrLag, with whom the only commonality was U2 and Dido :-)
(Of course, my "musical opposite" should have listened to about the same number of artists/tracks for this to be interesting)
Not impressed (Score:2)
I don't think it takes a computer to make than connection.....
I like some of their "mismatches" (Score:3, Insightful)
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In fact, I've maintained for a long time that Coulter and Moore are basically the same person. I happen to agree with the positions that one of them advocates far more often than the other, but the intellectual honesty, rigor, and fairness with which they make their cases is nearly interchangeable. And
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Actually, Ann and Mike are pop culture's politics. No one who's seriously into drilling down into the political quagmire is going to bother with either one of these entertainers. Entertainers is exactly what they are and shouldn't be taken as much else.
The "far" right and "far" left in this country have a ton in common compared to some of the wider based political parties that have an established
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Indeed, that's kinda why I picked those examples. Whenever somebody mentions either in trying to make a point, I have to roll my eyes.
huh...i guess amazon would not be moving to this.. (Score:3, Funny)
btw, not that great: i typed in lord of the rings, and it came back with this load of books by mary higgins clark..another one of my fav authors...
but get this: number 50 on the list was.........The hobbit!!
hehe...someone messed with the unsuggesters head..../me thinks the frost posters got to it...another one bites the dust!! long live the slashdot troll coalition!
i will go now...
Not very well done... (Score:2)
it's like arguments with your lover (Score:2)
So I would not be surprised if people who generally like fantasy and sf are quite sharply divided over whether Tolkien or Pratchett is better. But show
It's a brilliant idea! (cf travel guides) (Score:2)
The danger of Website.com recommends-type systems has always been the potential for the formation of subcultural ghettos, where everyone sticks in the "safe zones" of recommended material. To date, it never seems to have materialised, but Internet shopping still isn't mainstream enough for it to really be likely.
Being able to identify a "danger zones" could just give the user the courage to step out of the safe zone into the unknown.
It's analogous to the guide-book industry. Not so long ago, travel guides
nah, bring on the ghettos! (Score:2)
I mean, I like the idea that if, say, I go traveling in Normandy then everyone with a fairly shallow understanding of French history gleaned from a Let's Go guide will be standing in line to see Mt. San Michel, leaving the more subtle bits of the countryside relatively empty for me. And if I go to San Francisco, all the tourists wil
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Used in reverse... (Score:2)
On a whim, I tried searching for some of the most unreadably boring books possible - The business motivational/strategy genre.
Unsurprisingly, I kept seeing top-10 opposites that I really enjoy... A lot of Gaiman, some Prachett, even Robert Graves (From which I might hypothesize that the business world somehow forms the antithesis of our collective mythic tradions). But I also saw someone named Haruki Murakami consistantly appearing in the #1 or #2 slo
It doesn't work! (Score:2)
Strange Coincidence (Score:2)
I predict this is how millions of people... (Score:2)
It *must* be broken (Score:3, Informative)
Hah... (Score:2)
Find the Best Unsuggested Library (Score:3, Interesting)
perfectly evil book which causes the Unsuggester to generate a great library. The best try so far was "Who Moved My Cheese? For Kids", but not enough people own it."
The very fact that there is a WMMC for kids gives me greater despair then knowing GWB will be President for two more years.
Although the WMMC regular ed. unsuggestions are pretty good, good enough to keep my book club busy for a few years:
http://www.librarything.com/unsuggester/12799 [librarything.com]
This is ridiculous! (Score:2)
Alan Moore's 'Watchmen' gives me Brian McLaren's works, which I love.
Brian McLaren's 'The Last Word and the Word After That' gives me 'Good Omens', by Pratchett and Gaiman, which I've read more times than I can remember.
'Small Gods', by Pratchett gives me 'The Jesus I Never Knew', by Yancey. Again, an excellent, profound book.
And then Yancey's work, in turn, leads me to Douglas Adams, who needs no defense!
What's the m
Re: ridiculous (Score:2)
Well, we've Slashdotted the site but I found the same thing. For every book I tried, I found several un-suggestions that I have read and enjoyed. The oddest unsuggestion pair:
"Is Sex Necessary?" by Thurbur and White . . . and . . . "Where the Sidewalk Ends" by Shel Silverstien.
One's a cute (and rather innocent) parody of self-help books of the 1920s with funny little essays and doodly illustrations, the other is
Complete BS! (Score:2)
It assumes that if you like Sci-Fi, you must be a geek and won't like things related to Christianity or Literature (and vice-versa).
They either have sucky algorithms or people have narrower tastes than I expected. I hope it's the former...
Better way to broaden your horizons (Score:2, Interesting)
The way I use to broaden my horizons is to buy books in a discount store. In England, a typical novel might cost about £7.00 or £8.00, while some discount stores have a "3 books for £5" offer. Often, these offers are for authors that I have never heard of. I have been buying most of my novels in this way for several years and most of the discount books by authors-unknown-to-me that I have bought have been
Yay (Score:3, Funny)
Something odd (Score:2)
It came up under searches for:
* The Vor Game by Lois McMaster Bujold.
* Kim by Rudyard Kipling
* Startide rising by David Brin
* The voyage of the Dawn Treader by C. S. Lewis
* Harry Potter and the sorcerer's stone by J.K. Rowling
The first three I could see where there might not be hug
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There's probably something a little deeper here, that a social scientist could track down. Given what the list says, "Expected N, found M", it seems that they're taking the overall popularity of a certain book (N) and comparing it to the popularity of people who bought the book in question (M). Christianity may come up a lot because it
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Either that, or the algorithm is secretly trying to push Christianity... :-)
Hrmmm... is that why my collection on LibraryThing now has a 'Burn' icon next to all the fantasy books?
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Monkeyboi
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