BurnedOut
Your friendly neighborhood asshole
Shoot.
Why don't you tell me which points you disagree with? Why not an open-source app? My goal is to provide a real shot to everybody and the problems are too stupid to not solve by simply making it a public affair.So I'd probably approach the research with a view to trying to understand why people are not succeeding on dating apps. Is it lack of experience? Low self-confidence? etc etc. As it might be from that that you identify potential solutions or business ideas you weren't even expecting. Maybe what they actually need isn't another dating app, but relationship coaching or sex education, etc. That's how I'd try to think about this anyway.
Why don't you tell me which points you disagree with? Why not an open-source app? My goal is to provide a real shot to everybody and the problems are too stupid to not solve by simply making it a public affair.So I'd probably approach the research with a view to trying to understand why people are not succeeding on dating apps. Is it lack of experience? Low self-confidence? etc etc. As it might be from that that you identify potential solutions or business ideas you weren't even expecting. Maybe what they actually need isn't another dating app, but relationship coaching or sex education, etc. That's how I'd try to think about this anyway.
The internet has already turned people into whiny lousy bastards who wimp and balk at anything that requires out
of the comfort zone. Best example? The whole concept of 'introverts'. Today's 'introverts' are so damn lazy they won't their arse even for the simplest social events.
Why do you want to mollycoddle people for things they are responsible for?
Dating is as old as mankind itself. What is the difficult thing you are talking about? It is by far one of the most intuitive activities. There are no mysteries here.I don't know if relationship coaching or sex education is the best solution. They were examples. My point is is that it's best to approach discovery research with a mindset of being open to identifying opportunities you weren't expecting.
Dating is as old as mankind itself. What is the difficult thing you are talking about? It is by far one of the most intuitive activities. There are no mysteries here.I don't know if relationship coaching or sex education is the best solution. They were examples. My point is is that it's best to approach discovery research with a mindset of being open to identifying opportunities you weren't expecting.
1. How are you gonna enforce that ratio? Why that ratio? How are you going to deal with fake identity and people making fake accounts?1. 3:2 ratio - men : women. Since they are 'choosy', a scarcity of males is a good trade-off
2. Texting/matching is not necessary. On every profile there's a counter that records the freq of users and it is up to them to take initiative.
3. The algorithm will be public. Also, I'll share the code with government who can fork the code and make their required changes.
4. Servers and maintenance lies with the gov. My goal is to make a state-run dating programme that will be one of the care packages available as social security.
5. Since 1:1 correspondence is available, there is a direct 50% chance of matching without any algorithm bias.
6. Based on the time duration preference, users will be staggered after they find their first match. If 1:1 correspondence is not there, the user will be queued. If users' match turns out to be incompatible/fake/etc, they will be placed at the top of the queue after new waiting users. However with enough state funding, the app will move closer to achieving a real 1:1 correspondence.
7. Users can like/check out all the cards for infinite number of times. They can choose to temporarily block visitors if they perceive them to be too intruding.
8. Account will be on the basis of a SSN/Aadhar/etc and not simple signup via an email.
9. There will be a committee elected by the users to examine the algorithm from time to time and propose new features just like RFCs.
10. Users can use filters and once they exhaust the list, they will be temporarily suspended and their account will be handed to somebody in the queue.
11. No bullshit akin to superlike, superswipe. No preferential treatment.
12. After sufficient uptime, the gov can auto-open accounts for every new person which will be activated when they are 16. Users will be deleted if they die or they can donate an account to someone in the queue if they are not interested.
13. Users will be required to post something at least once in a week to prevent catfishing. No selfies allowed and no pictures of somebody else.
14. Dressing norms is up to the gov but semi-nudity will result in a temp ban and a fine.
15. A proportion of users will be handed moderation duties - examining new pictures, etc. It will be similar to jury service. Failure to do so will result in a long temp ban.
If it's so simple then why some people need a dating app for it and why the existing apps are not working?Dating is as old as mankind itself. What is the difficult thing you are talking about? It is by far one of the most intuitive activities. There are no mysteries here.
Sounds like a poor-quality nightclub.Personally, I think dating apps is a difficult area to innovate in. If this is about improving the hetero male's experience of dating apps, a fundamental part of the problem is that apps are over-saturated with a high men: women ration.
In real life, nightclubs were great for meeting new men. But the more confident men in nightclubs, could rely on their confidence to give them an advantge, which in turn meant they didn't need to try as hard. So they often resulted in either a poor relationship and poor sex.So naturally the less confident men are not going to do very well. Building another app won't solve this problem.
Sounds like a poor-quality nightclub.Personally, I think dating apps is a difficult area to innovate in. If this is about improving the hetero male's experience of dating apps, a fundamental part of the problem is that apps are over-saturated with a high men: women ration.
In real life, nightclubs were great for meeting new men. But the more confident men in nightclubs, could rely on their confidence to give them an advantge, which in turn meant they didn't need to try as hard. So they often resulted in either a poor relationship and poor sex.So naturally the less confident men are not going to do very well. Building another app won't solve this problem.
So a lot of women didn't meet the guy of their dreams by checking out the guys in nightclubs, and would keep checking out guys in real life. 30% of people used to marry someone they met at work. Lots of people met as friends of friends.
As people have switched from socialising offline to socialising online, their dating approach has switched. They go on dating apps. If those don't work, they also look at the people they meet virtually as well, such as the forum posters that catch their eye, or the social media accounts that catch their eye.
However, the forums and social media have gone the same way as the dating apps: offering similar services also run by companies, which means they appeal to the same people who like dating apps.
Confident men respond well to opportunities. So they do well with reactive systems that you have to sign up for, and send messages on, in order to increase your chances of finding a mate.
For less confident men, you need services that are pro-active, systems that will actively seek out all men, that will identify their positive traits that they dismiss as a result of their lack of confidence, will objectively assess the value of each trait that they lower as a result of their lack of confidence, and then select appropriate mates.
Alternatively, you can train confidence. So you can train them to be confident in general.
Another option is that you can train them in dating skills, until they are competent and confident.
In real life, there are certain additional factors:For a lot of the people struggling on the apps I'm unsure if the problem can be solved by making another dating app with a fairer algorithm, etc. In which case it's throwing a lot of time into building an application, for what? If we got to know the pain-points more intimately my hypothesis is that the area to innovate in would be self-development as you say.
Strong agree. Feedback loops are such a crucial predictor of relationship health.What I've come to see as the most crucial factor in whether a relationship is successful or not (aside from self-evident things like both partners being alive, consenting, of-age and not abusive) is whether there exists a positive or negative feedback loop.
Enforcing will be done by queuing users after the quota has reached. Solution? More servers and patience. There's no other way to guarantee 'one for each' maxim.How are you gonna enforce that ratio? Why that ratio? How are you going to deal with fake identity and people making fake accounts?
Well, the gov already has all the essential data. Scamming is almost undoable and the risk of catfishing also goes down. It's self-regulatory. Reduces the burden of manual screening. Also what kind of privacy breach are we talking about when users share data that cannot be misused in most circumstances - innocuous pictures and not semi-nude/nude stuff and sexting. It is forbidden on the app. Users can engage in all thir by sharing numbers, etc. By limiting the risk of sensitive info posted, the damnest problems are automatically solved. Furthermore no data will be mined for commercial usage and users can opt to not store data altogether. The app will never upload the pictures, instead, it will download the pictures in the viewer's pc at a need basis. As soon either of them shut the app, data is gone.If you're going into ID verification then you open a huge issue of safekeeping government issued ID's, credentials and sensitive information.
Yes. Similar to real life. No hidden discrimination like Bumble which is sexist and racist and vain.5. What do you mean that there's a 50% chance of matching? You mean 50% chance of finding anyone?
The growth of specialized labour market has stymied people from socializing in person. Many people want to work on their lives and not waste time in wooing someone. What i meant was humans have an innate desire to connect but may not always have the opportunity. Existing apps are bullshit because they are entirely profit driven and are very discriminating. Eons ago, personal computers were a sign of exquisiteness. Now they are ubiquitous and essential to survival. Why cannot you imagine dating as a public activity? It is also a human right to seek love.If it's so simple then why some people need a dating app for it and why the existing apps are not working?
Fine, let's add this feature too. But that is for another thread.Why not a general meeting app that would facilitate 1 on 1 and group meetings helping people socialize and find common interests.
Well, if people realise that they are not being scammed for money, they will take up efforts to do all the things they had stopped doing - self-care, social engagement, initiative-taking, empathy - to build healthy relationships and improve themselves in the process.13. You're going to lose 70% of legitimate users just by forcing them to post. Criminals and advertiser's are going to dutifully setup fake profiles with regular updates.