Hasty Briefsbeta

Email was the user interface for the first AI recommendation engines

a day ago
  • #music-discovery
  • #social-filtering
  • #early-AI
  • In 1993, discovering new music involved manually tuning radio dials and visiting record stores.
  • By 1994, an AI named Ringo allowed users to email their favorite artists and receive music recommendations.
  • Ringo used social filtering, a concept developed at MIT, which predicts preferences based on past agreements between users.
  • Early collaborative filtering systems like Tapestry (1992) and SIFT (1994) laid the groundwork for recommendation engines.
  • SIFT, developed at Stanford, used email to curate and recommend articles based on user preferences.
  • Bellcore's video recommendation system (1993-1994) used email to suggest movies based on user ratings.
  • Ringo, launched in 1994, combined email interfaces with social filtering to recommend music, creating a personalized experience.
  • Users anthropomorphized Ringo, treating it as a friend despite its algorithmic nature.
  • Ringo evolved into web-based services like HOMR and Firefly before being acquired by Microsoft in 1998.
  • Social filtering principles persist in modern platforms like Google, Facebook, Netflix, and Spotify.
  • Email newsletters remain popular due to their ability to curate content based on user preferences, similar to early social filtering systems.