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Im thinking color coded (doppler-looking) map. + |
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I don't think you'd learn anything useful from this. A properly-conducted poll would show no variation from day to day apart from predictable patterns (dips on Mondays, surges on holidays, a certain amount of change in response to weather and events). Individuals have moods; in blocks of millions, everything averages out. |
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It might be interesting to see general geographical variations in "happiness" (average self-ratings, variability, elasticity), but this sort of thing is already studied. |
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If you did have a running measure, it might be interesting to try to tease out the meanings of little deviations (current events, weather, whatever else) and learn what sorts of things really affect people. I don't think it would ever be useful for travellers, though. |
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Since moods are contagious it's conceivable that good moods and bad moods might actually spread through geographic areas, but if such an effect is present I'm pretty sure it would be swamped by noise. |
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Ooh, yes, the media-spread contagion of happiness. + |
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egnor: I don't know. Everyone has a mood already. It may be affected by the moods of other people, but a single one won't sweep through an area like a disease or a rumour. I think the external effects of good and bad ones are just part of the wash -- they're all quite small in scale, and they'll all cancel out when the numbers get large. Still, who knows. |
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The system might be useful if it had much greater resolving power. It might really be useful to know what the mood's like in the particular office or bar or party you were about to go to. (But then your information collection would have to be outrageously creepy.) |
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(The fishbone's not mine, mind; it's an attractive idea.) |
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I can't imagine it would be more difficult to guage than the Consumer Confidence reports, with their "Present Situation" and "Expectations" indices... the issue would likely be turn-around time. |
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Imagine your local television station having a web page bearing photos of the international and national news anchors, weather forecasters, sportscasters, business desk, etc. each with the question "How did I make you feel today?" and a voting button with croissant/fishbone/rat's arse style responses. |
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Croissant. I'm for anything that complicates the obvious. |
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Ha! (it already has, indeed) Still, I like the idea of an opportunity for more meaningless news commentary. Unless, of course, it provides incentive to envious sorts to march over to a happy region and wreak a little depression on those contented bastards to teach 'em a lesson. |
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