arkinox on Nostr: Thanks! You don't necessarily have to create unique descriptors for different product ...
Thanks!
You don't necessarily have to create unique descriptors for different product groups. You can just have a general label set that covers all product groups. While being more generic, it can still be useful.
The root of QTS is:
thumbs up = 50% score. Anything 50% or higher is considered "good". Anything 50% or lower is considered "bad".
In addition to the thumb rating, the user can toggle on provided labels. If there are 5 labels, each label is worth 10%.
This means thumbs-up + all labels = 100%, a perfect score.
But 50% is good, even without labels picked. So we have a nice broad range to compare products.
You can even give a product thumbs-down (0%) and add labels, giving the rating a range below 50%.
You don't necessarily have to create unique descriptors for different product groups. You can just have a general label set that covers all product groups. While being more generic, it can still be useful.
The root of QTS is:
thumbs up = 50% score. Anything 50% or higher is considered "good". Anything 50% or lower is considered "bad".
In addition to the thumb rating, the user can toggle on provided labels. If there are 5 labels, each label is worth 10%.
This means thumbs-up + all labels = 100%, a perfect score.
But 50% is good, even without labels picked. So we have a nice broad range to compare products.
You can even give a product thumbs-down (0%) and add labels, giving the rating a range below 50%.