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I've been using Italki over the past few months. I would have called my experience perfect if not for one thing: the feedback system. At no point has it not been annoying. I click the "Confirm Lesson" button expecting that to be it. But then, it shows a new popup, asking me to rate the lesson. "Alright," I say and give it 5 stars. Out of nowhere, the three feedback goblins show up, asking you riddles that change every time as the submit button slides out of sight. Why do the questions change every time? If I'm on my laptop, I'm just going to skip the questions. If I'm on my phone, I'm quickly going to skim through the questions and click "Yes, yes, yes" and move on. While I try to be more careful these days, I'm never sure how many times I've accidentally answered incorrectly. You'd be right in asking users to read every question clearly. But being bombarded by "Accept Cookie" and "Accept TOS" buttons over the past few hours along with an hour-long lesson means that my attention span is already drained. Can we get any insight into how user feedback is weighted and used internally? And is there a possibility of getting a better feedback system that doesn't feel so forced? An email or a small popup, perhaps? Is there a possibility of getting a feature to change the feedback or to at least remove all feedback we've provided? To other users, how has your experience been with this system?
25 de jan de 2025 19:12
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Chapter 13 A Powder for Dragon Mrs. Frisby and the Rats of NIMH by Robert C. O'Brien Illustrations by Justin Todd How will the rats or Mrs. Frisby move her house with Dragon on the loose? Send me a message for your free pdf copy of this book. https://www.italki.com/en/teacher/13365914 **Vocabulary with definitions and audio for chapters 6-14. https://teach.italki.com/vocabulary/927367 The strange rat was named Arthur. He was stocky, square and muscular, with bright, hard eyes. He looked efficient. ‘You might call him our chief engineer,’ said Nicodemus to Mrs Frisby, ‘as, indeed, you might call Justin the captain of the guard — if we had any such titles, but we don’t. Mr Ages thought Arthur should come along, though he didn’t say why. So we still don’t know what your problem is.’ Isabella was gone. She had dropped her papers on the floor again when the others had entered, and Justin, to her intense confusion and visible delight, had helped her pick them up. ‘Hello, Izzy,’ he said. ‘How’s the reading coming?’ ‘It’s fine,’ she said. ‘I finished the Third Reader last week. Now I’m on the Fourth.’ ‘The Fourth Reader already! You’re getting quite grown up!’ At that she had almost dropped the papers a third time and made a dash for the door. It did not matter, Mrs Frisby noticed, if Justin called her Izzy — just so long as he called her something. Nicodemus closed the door behind her, then sat down on one of the benches, facing Mrs Frisby; the others sat down, too, Mr Ages stretching his splinted leg in front of him. Nicodemus took the reading glass from his satchel, opened it, and through it gravely examined Mrs Frisby’s face. ‘You will forgive the glass and the scrutiny,’ he said. ‘When I lost my left eye, I also damaged the right one; I can see little close-up without the glass — indeed, not very much even with it.’ At length he folded the glass and put it on the table. ‘Now,’ he said, ‘what is it we can do to help you?’ ......
Chapter 13 A Powder for Dragon
25 de jan de 2025 05:21
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