Twitter co-founder Biz Stone finally unveiled his Jelly mystery today, a picture based social questions mobile community where users can use pictures as a question and invite friends to help him answer specific questions about the picture.
From this early Jelly surfaced, the industry's evaluation of the application is mixed, but also a lot of people questioned. But after communicating with Stone, I feel that there is a more unique and ambitious goal behind Jelly, the most important is to enhance the user's emotional input to the surrounding world, so that the process of answering any question becomes more meaningful than the problem itself.
Users use Jelly to help others, just as they use Jelly to get help, and if we succeed in this goal, we will be more committed to extending Jelly to every smartphone user who realizes that there are people in the world who need their help every moment. Let us make the world more emotional, let us help people around, remind people around to help others.
Admittedly, Jelly is useful, and today I succeeded in answering someone else a mathematical question (pictured below):
Similarly, we can ask a friend what to wear today, where to travel, or how to decorate a house. For an interesting example, Jelly's COO, Kevin Thau's niece, had sought professional advice for his paintings, which had been uploaded to the hands of a friend's artist and a professional painting proposal.
The success of Jelly lies in the ability to create a comprehensive question-and-answer community that users visit every day, especially when they are bored, such as in a supermarket line.
Now many people are studying AI (artificial FDI), but everyone seems to ignore the wisdom (FDI), the world's 7 billion people, the combined wisdom can do a lot of things.
Jelly In addition to being a useful search engine, as I have said before, it can also create a cycle of emotions, as long as people realize that there are others who may need their help, and this kind of help mode can be recycled, or in the end people can jump out of Jelly, Isn't it nice to really be helping others in real life?
When you look at Jelly in such an angle as Stone, I find it more reasonable to pass on knowledge for others is just an instant help, but Jelly want to find a sustainable approach, Jelly not encourage discussion or a long answer, just need some concise answer is enough.
Jelly is the first one I know that really treats the purpose as an application that allows people to help each other, rather than seeking help from others, this counterintuitive approach provokes curiosity and, more importantly, Stone has always been a very ambitious person and a very thoughtful person, even if Jelly Now it's a whole new field, but we're still waiting for Stone to lead it.
Attached Jelly Official video introduction: