I think it’s possible to do it that way, but I’m not sure how. That would be an interesting exercise. Actually doing it, however, is impractical, because it would require participants to have special clients, and we want to make it as accessible as possible.
(A much bigger issue than rigging the role assignment, is using the web to looking up answers.)
(A much bigger issue than rigging the role assignment, is using the web to looking up answers.)
I think the trick is to find questions that only you know the answer to, but that aren’t in any way about you. For example, “I dropped a quarter at this google maps location and checked ten minutes later whether it was still there; was it?” qualifies; but there should be easier ways to accomplish the same thing.
I think it’s possible to do it that way, but I’m not sure how. That would be an interesting exercise. Actually doing it, however, is impractical, because it would require participants to have special clients, and we want to make it as accessible as possible.
(A much bigger issue than rigging the role assignment, is using the web to looking up answers.)
I think the trick is to find questions that only you know the answer to, but that aren’t in any way about you. For example, “I dropped a quarter at this google maps location and checked ten minutes later whether it was still there; was it?” qualifies; but there should be easier ways to accomplish the same thing.
You could solve the specialized client issue by writing it in javascript.
still, practically speaking, there’s just no point in trying to figure out how to attach the bars across your windows when your door has no lock.