Anvika Anvika
@aanvika1993
@aanvika1993
“It's tough to be good at something you're not interested in. It's nearly impossible to be great at something you're not obsessed with.”
XYZ and then cancel your payment, you will receive a message saying "Hi Rahul, I am near you. I have used Vidyakul and I was the district topper last year. Everyone knows the district toppers, and that plays a huge role in building trust. I am from this school, this is my village, and if you need any help, here is my number or my team's number or V
... See moreJust saw a post about Blanket, how it realised that a user had ordered from a hospital.
The after order page had a widget that said, We have noticed that you are ordering from a hospital , we have prioritised your order.
We will speedy recovery to you and your loved ones.
Amazing customer experience and the user shared it on LinkedIn
https://www.matthewball.co/all/netflixobjectives
online distribution encourages audiences to concentrate their watching time and enables networks to monopolize their viewers’ attention. Much of this comes from the fact that unlike pay TV, most online video subscriptions are sold a la carte and on a month-to-month basis. This has four major implicati
Open AI - OpenAI recognizes that Google is its biggest threat, particularly in the consumer arena where the startup has the biggest brand in the space, and it wants to do everything it can to ensure the tech giant doesn’t get any buzz.
Ambient computing is a concept that revolves around the seamless integration of technology into our surroundings to
... See moreGoogle I/O keynote: Stratechery
The first takeaway from both keynotes is just how impressive Google’s infrastructure is.
which the quality of an AI-mediated experience is dependent on the AI being integrated into the problem space and its relevant data.
Gmail, can help you summarise the email thread and you can also ask questions which it will search
Companies that exploit our gameplaying compulsion will have an edge over those who don’t, so every company that wishes to compete must gamify in ever more addictive ways, even though in the long term this harms everyone.
First: choose long-term goals over short-term ones. Short, frequent feedback loops offer regular reinforcement, which helps motiva
... See moreThis led him to propose two kinds of reward: primary and conditioned reinforcers. A primary reinforcer is something we’re born to desire. A conditioned reinforcer is something we learn to desire, due to its association with a primary reinforcer.
because while our biological need for the primary reinforcer is easily satiable, our abstract desire for the conditioned reinforcer isn’t.The pigeons would stop seeking food once their bellies were full, but they’d take far longer to get tired of hearing the food dispenser click.
immediate rewards work better than delayed, unpredictable rewards work better than fixed, and conditioned rewards work better
the American management consultant Charles Coonradt wondered why people work harder at games they pay to play than at work they’re paid to do. Like Skinner, Coonradt saw that a defining feature of compelling games was immediate rewards. Most of the feedback loops in employment — from salary payments to annual performance appraisals — were torturously long.
Thus, the McNamara fallacy, as it came to be known, refers to our tendency to focus on the most quantifiable measures, even if doing so leads us from our actual goals. Put simply, we try to measure what we value, but end up valuing what we measure.
We’re easily motivated by points and scores because they’re easy to track and enjoyable to accrue. As such, scorekeeping is, for many, becoming the new foundation of their lives. “Looksmaxxing” is a new trend of gamified beauty, where people assign scores to physical appearance and then use any means necessary to maximize their score. And in the online wellness space, there is now a “Rejuvenation Olympics” complete with a leaderboard that ranks people by their “age reversal”. Even sleep has become a game; many people now use apps like Pokemon Sleep that reward them for achieving high “sleep scores”, and some even compete to get the highest “sleep ranking”.
Most such scores are simplifications that don’t tell the whole story. For instance, sleep trackers only measure what’s easy to measure, like movement, which says nothing about crucial facts like time spent in REM sleep. A more accurate measure of how well you slept would be how refreshed you feel in the morning, but since this can’t be quantified, it tends to be ignored.
: the constant, momentary “wins” that come with playing digital games give us a false sense of progression and accomplishment, a neurochemical high that feels like victory but is not, and which, if it becomes a habit, risks placating our ambitions to pursue true fulfilment.
All the things a gamified world promises in the short term — pride, purpose, meaning, control, motivation, and happiness — it threatens in the long term.