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5 stars ANSWERED on Sat 10 Nov 2007 - 12:13 am UTC by davidsarokin

Question: Google Answers statistics

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Asked by ribuck on Fri 9 Nov 2007 - 9:23 pm UTC:

When was the first question posted to Google Answers? When was the last
question posted to Google Answers?

Approximately how many questions were posted to Google Answers?
Approximately how many of those were answered?

Uclue Researcher 5 stars Answer by Researcher davidsarokin on Sat 10 Nov 2007 - 12:13 am UTC:

Hello ribuck.  Happy anniversary...or something along those lines.  Let's
get to it.



When was the first question posted to Google Answers? 

The very first question posted to Google Answers on April 9, 2002: 

http://answers.google.com/answers/main?cmd=threadview&id=2
Why is the sky blue?

and as far as I know, was a test question posted to get the ball rolling. 
You can see that the question was asked by "birdie" who appears to be the
only user name at GA without a -ga extension.  


When was the last question posted to Google Answers?

GA's final day for posting questions was November 30, 2006, and the very
last question posted was:

http://answers.google.com/answers/threadview?id=787274
Unable to process request. Please try again later


Researcher's had a month after the final posting to answer any remaining
questions.  The very last answer posted is mongolia-ga's:

http://answers.google.com/answers/threadview?id=787082
And now the end is near



Approximately how many questions were posted to Google Answers?

Tbis one's tricky.  I once estimated, for an article I was writing, 71,000
questions, but I can't recreate that estimate with the current stored
version of the Google Answers site.

Using the currently available tools at the GA site, I was able to determine
the following:


https://answers.google.com/answers/browse?catid=1000
about 2748 in Arts and Entertainment  

https://answers.google.com/answers/browse?catid=1100
about 8639 in Business and Money

https://answers.google.com/answers/browse?catid=1200
about 4373 in Computers 

https://answers.google.com/answers/browse?catid=1300
about 1172 in Family and Home 

https://answers.google.com/answers/browse?catid=1400
about 2398 in Health 

https://answers.google.com/answers/browse?catid=1500
about 3119 in Reference, Education and News 

https://answers.google.com/answers/browse?catid=1600
about 851 in Relationships and Society 

https://answers.google.com/answers/browse?catid=1700
about 1624 in Science 

https://answers.google.com/answers/browse?catid=1800
about 1096 in Sports and Recreation 

https://answers.google.com/answers/browse?catid=1900
about 27067 in Miscellaneous


The grand total for the individual categories is 53,087 questions.



Approximately how many of those were answered?

By adding the "num" parameter to any of the above URLs, it is possible to
display all the questions in the category on a single page.  For instance,
here's the Family and Home category:


https://answers.google.com/answers/browse?catid=1300&num=2000
Showing questions 1 - 1172 of about 1172 in Family and Home 


Using this strategy, I counted the number of answered questions in a few
categories.  The results consistently come in at 43-44% of questions
answered.
 

Arts and Entertainment
1186/2748= 0.43158661


Family and Home
511/1172=0.43600683


Reference, Education and News
1403/3119=0.44982366



I hope that information meets your needs.  But as always, if there's
anything more I can do for you, just let me know.

David

Uclue Researcher Comment by Researcher pinkfreud on Sat 10 Nov 2007 - 1:19 am UTC:

This report says that 77,675 questions were asked on GA (37,971 of which
were answered) during the period from June 2002 through October 2004:

http://jellis.org/work/group2005/papers/RafaeliRabanRavidGoogleAnswersGroup05.pdf

Uclue Researcher Comment by Researcher davidsarokin on Sat 10 Nov 2007 - 2:33 am UTC:

I wonder if we can collectively solve the mystery of the missing Q&A's?  

The numbers that pinkfreud cited seem right to me, in my heart of hearts,
but try as I might, I could only come up with the 50,000-plus questions
that I identified in my answer.

The report also shows about 49% of the questions getting answered at
GA...higher than the 44% I came up with, but certainly in the same
ballpark.

ribuck, what do you think of all this?

David

Uclue Researcher Comment by Researcher davidsarokin on Sat 10 Nov 2007 - 4:08 am UTC:

On the other hand, 77,000 questions in a little over two years implies
almost 100 questions a day.  I don't think GA was cranking at quite that
rate (though it would have been nice!).  But 77,000 or thereabouts over the
course of the entire GA lifespan does seem a reasonable number to me. 

David

Uclue Researcher Comment by Researcher pinkfreud on Sat 10 Nov 2007 - 4:59 am UTC:

This report found more than 40,000 questions in the GA database as of
November 2003:

http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/people/edelman/pubs/GoogleAnswers-011404.pdf

Comment by User probo on Sat 10 Nov 2007 - 6:24 am UTC:

David wrote:

1: The very first question posted to Google Answers on April 9, 2002

2: GA's final day for posting questions was November 30, 2006

3: 77,000 questions in a little over two years implies almost 100 questions
a day.

Time sure goes fast when you are having fun.

Worried of Hove

Comment by User probo on Sat 10 Nov 2007 - 8:15 am UTC:

A search for Space brings up about 420,000 Results; while a search for ga
brings up about 467,000.

Obviously, the Question Numbers themselves (up to 787,272) are unhelpful
but I would have thought that 400,000 plus was possible.

Am I missing something?

Probo

5 stars Accepted and rated by ribuck on Sat 10 Nov 2007 - 12:27 pm UTC:

Thanks!

Comment by User myoarin on Sat 10 Nov 2007 - 1:06 pm UTC:

The graph further down on Pink's first link does show the number of
questions per month for the period to Dec 2004, well over 2000 on average,
which does seem high, but we may have blotted out recollection of all the
"dfddf" type questions and the ca. 20,000 the report says received neither
an answer nor comment.

What happened to questions that were cancelled or removed by the Editor?
Could they have dropped out of David's statistics from the currently
available data for the categories?

Comment by User archae0pteryx on Tue 13 Nov 2007 - 7:46 am UTC:

A lot of questions have been deleted.  They started disappearing right
after the closing.  Present count is definitely low.

Tryx

Uclue Researcher Answer clarification by Researcher davidsarokin on Tue 13 Nov 2007 - 12:56 pm UTC:

Tryx wrote:  "A lot of questions have been deleted.  They started
disappearing right after the closing."

Did this really happen?  I've never noticed any of my own Q&A's
disappearing, but then again, there's lots of things I never notice.

I know there's been a lot of speculation about disappearing questions, but
to the best of my recollection, no one's ever actually confirmed a
disappeared Q&A, other than the occasional repulsive question that was
deleted for obvious reasons.

Wondering what others think?

As for the numbers, 50-70 thousand in the space of 4 1/2 years (I don't
know why I said 2 years, above) seems reasonable to me.  This comes out to
1 or 2 questions an hour, which feels about right, No?

david

Uclue Researcher Comment by Researcher Roger Browne (eiffel) on Tue 13 Nov 2007 - 2:09 pm UTC:

David: the reason you said "2 years" above is because you were referring to
the report cited by Pinkfreud which counted "77,675 questions ... (37,971
of which were answered) ... from June 2002 through October 2004".

I just checked the Google Answers site, and all of my 199 answers are still
online:
https://answers.google.com/answers/ratings?user=1173359978291513960

Regards,
Roger

Uclue Researcher Comment by Researcher Roger Browne (eiffel) on Tue 13 Nov 2007 - 2:12 pm UTC:

My fuzzy recollection is that for most of the time, questions ran about 6
per hour for most of the day, dropping to one per hour or less in the early
hours of the US morning.

Uclue Researcher Comment by Researcher davidsarokin on Tue 13 Nov 2007 - 2:26 pm UTC:

>>David: the reason you said "2 years" above is because you were referring
to the report cited by Pinkfreud <<

Like I said, there are a lot of things I never notice...!

Comment by User probo on Tue 13 Nov 2007 - 4:18 pm UTC:

Here's a thread from another forum that I posted on Dec 2, 2006:

When I reported earlier that some Questions had been axed, I was 
reporting my own experience which was really bizarre because just one 
of my many questions had been removed and that was an oldie which, I 
reckon, was over 3 years old. 

This is all that was left: 

Your question: BKWSU (Brahma Kumaris World Spiritual University) was 
removed from Google Answers. The Google Answers editors have sent you 
an email to provide further details on this removal. If you have you 
have any concerns about this, please e-mail us at 
answers-supp...@google.com. Include the Question ID: 206345 and your 
Google Answers Nickname in any correspondence. 

Moreover, the Editors never did send me the promised email 'to provide 
further details on this removal'. 

However, I did not have any 'concerns' because I had saved a copy of 
the Answer as a Word Doc. It runs to 8 pages so I won't post it here. 

Anyway, here is a snippet: 

1. "Brahma Kumaris" cult 

(a) "On Thursday 8 January 1998, the Spanish police in Santa Cruz on 
the tourist island of Tenerife announced that they had only just 
prevented a mass suicide planned for that day  A Berlin psychologist, 
Ms Heide Fittkau-Garthe... was the leader, the 'World Mother', of the 
Atma Center (Isis Holistic Center); the cult involved in this.... 
Apparently, Fittkau-Garthe had been the leader of the Hamburg branch 
of the Brahma Kumaris religious group (founded in the 1930s in India; 
headquarters at Mt. Abu). She retained its doctrine of an elite of 
'golden souls', destined to reincarnate to rule the world in a new 
world era, and its belief in "Shiv Baba" (or "Brahma Baba") as supreme 
deity." 

My interest arose because one of my 'pro bono' clients was having a run 
in with a guy who was a member of this cult. I eventually met him and 
he truly believed that they were dstined to rule the world. He even 
tried to recruit me! 

Maybe if he had suceeded the Cult would now be ruling the world? 
However, when they failed to win me over, they then went for GA? (Only 
joking.) 

Worried of Hove 

Note: The Question was posted 20 May 2003 08:37 PDT and the Researcher was
Tehuti-ga.

Uclue Researcher Comment by Researcher admin on Tue 13 Nov 2007 - 4:42 pm UTC:

For any takedown notices, please use the "Contact Us" link at the bottom of
the page :-)

Comment by User myoarin on Tue 13 Nov 2007 - 5:00 pm UTC:

Hi Bryan,

I suspect that Google was getting some feedback from someone about you
presentation and wanted to a void a possible legal fight  - maybe in your
interest.

Hmm, if Google holds the copyright, does that absolved the author from
responsibility for the contents?

Myo

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