Entry tags:
(no subject)
We all know that Amazon's recommendations can be quixotic, to say the least. I deplore the habit they have of sending me recommendations like "We noticed that you recently purchased Blade of the Immortal volume 9. Would you be interested in volumes 1-8?"
So
myrialux was recently browsing his recommendations, and because he liked The Zombie Survival Guide and owned World War Z, Amazon recommended...

Guess the last thing we need is a bunch of uneducated zombies.
So

Guess the last thing we need is a bunch of uneducated zombies.

no subject
no subject
no subject
At the heart of the soup-can analogy are the algorithms that Amazon uses to “recommend” books to customers. Most customers aren’t aware that the personalized book recommendations they receive are a result of paid promotions, not just purchase-derived data. This is frustrating for publishers who want their books to be judged on their merits. “I think their twisted algorithms that point you toward bestsellers instead of books that you might actually like [are] a shame,” Gavin Grant, cofounder of Small Beer Press, laments.
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
Ohhh yes. I've gotten that one before! Drives me nuts. "Wait, wait, you mean I should read the first eight volumes of the series before reading the ninth?! Holy shit! So that's what I've been doing wrong!"
*facepalm*
no subject
no subject
no subject