Search
    Google
    Tip of the Day Blog
    The Web

Entries in Household (35)

Wednesday
Nov202013

ONLINE RATINGS SERVICES

Consumer Reports: The truth about Angie’s List, Yelp, and more

Online ratings services promise unbiased reviews of local businesses. Do they deliver?

Published: September 2013

Need to find a good plumber, hairdresser, or auto mechanic? If you’re like a lot of people, you’re happy to turn to online ratings services to get a recommendation.

More than 100 million consumers checked ratings for companies in 97 U.S. and international markets in just the first three months of this year, according to Yelp. Some 2 million households subscribe to Angie’s List for its version of the skinny on local service providers in 244 markets in the U.S. And Google now gives you local business ratings, whether you want them or not, by serving them up while you’re busy navigating Google Maps.

Sure, it can be convenient to find out what others think of a handyman’s skills before you hire him to retile your kitchen. But how trustworthy are the opinions? Quality controls are necessary to ensure accuracy and reliability, because the scores can be manipulated by self-interested parties. So we decided to learn the methods of five leading rating providers serving the San Francisco Bay area: Angie's List, Consumer's Checkbook, Google+ Local, Porch, and Yelp, as well as the Better Business Bureau. (None of these services offers ratings everywhere.) Unsettling surprises came fast and frequently. Here’s what you should know about the companies we examined, listed in alphabetical (not ranked) order.

Angie's List

  • Years in business: 18
  • Structure: Publicly traded company
  • Cost for consumers: Varies; $46 a year in San Francisco
  • How it works: Companies set up free online profiles or involuntarily get one when a member rates them. When they get two reviews and a B average or better, and there are no alerts about them, they can pay to advertise and must offer discount coupons that “position your business to rotate on page 1 of search results,” Angie’s List says.
    Consumers subscribe to gain access to highly rated service providers. After they hire a business, they’re asked to rate it based on nine measures. They also have to affirm that the information they provide is true and accurate and that they’re not an employee, competitor, or in any way related to the service provider.
  • Caveats: We think that the ability of A- and B-rated companies to buy their way to the top of the default search results skews the results. Cheryl Reed, a spokeswoman for the company, disagrees. “We don’t believe that,” she says. But Angie’s List marketing materials intended for businesses say that companies that advertise get “an advantage of increased exposure” that “can propel you ahead of your competition.” They get 12 times more profile views than companies that don’t buy ads.
    Angie’s List encourages businesses to solicit reviews by giving customers free, postage-paid forms, stickers on thank you notes, and Web links embedded in e-mail invoices. But experts who study survey techniques say that can create a bias for positive reviews.
    Angie’s List misleads consumers by prominently promising that “businesses don’t pay” and that it’s a consumer-driven service supported by membership fees. But almost 70 percent of the company’s revenues come from advertising purchased by the service providers being rated. Angie’s List tells consumers that it provides “reviews you can trust,” and takes steps to detect and remove fraudulent positive and negative reviews. But company investment disclosures say that “we cannot guarantee the accuracy of our reviews.”

Consumers' Checkbook

  • Years in business: 37
  • Structure: Nonprofit
  • Cost for consumers: $34 for two years
  • How it works: Local companies are involuntarily rated by the Center for the Study of Services, based on surveys of Consumers’ Checkbook’s own subscribers, Consumer Reports subscribers, and CSS’ own research. (Consumer Reports gave CSS $25,000 in matching funds to get started in the mid-1970s and has allowed Checkbook to survey its subscribers in the seven metro areas it covers.)
    CSS’ own research includes conducting undercover price shopping and gathering complaint data from regulators (such as the state attorney general’s office) and the Better Business Bureau. Subscribers access detailed ratings online and in a biannual print magazine covering their metropolitan area.
  • Caveats: We found little to fault here, except that in some cases a business rating may be based on as few as 10 users. But Checkbook provides complete transparency and guidance about how to assess those ratings compared with companies with more users. And since those numbers come from known subscribers objectively surveyed, they don’t carry the same tarnish as reviews from people who voluntarily review for some unknown motive.

Google+ Local

  • Years in business: 1
  • Structure: Publicly traded company
  • Cost for consumers: Free
  • How it works: Anyone can search Google+ Local by city, state, and business type to find reviews, which are simple one- to five-star ratings and commentary. Google is mum about how an overall rating is calculated beyond saying that it’s based on user ratings—no details on how users are verified—“and a variety of other signals to ensure that the overall score best reflects the quality of the establishment,” according to the Google+ Local website.
    To write a review, you must create your own personal Google+ profile, typically using your real name. That does provide something of a reality check, because you can click on the reviewer and see how many reviews she has written, and click further to her Google+ profile and scan or read all her reviews to assess whether she tends to be effusive or disgruntled. Businesses create their own pages to connect with their customers and listen in.
  • Caveats: Google encourages businesses to reward their fans with coupons and to try to resolve customer-service problems. We can’t argue with that. But from a ratings reliability standpoint, this can skew the ratings positively, because assuaged customers can always delete their previously negative reviews. Google didn’t respond to two requests for an interview.

Porch

  • Years in business; structure: 1.5 years in beta, launched September 17, 2013
  • Structure: Privately financed startup
  • Cost for consumers: Free
  • How it works: Porch.com CEO Matt Ehrlichman describes the site as a “home improvement network” that lets visitors see photos and details about remodeling and repair projects that have been done in their neighborhood (drawn from 90 million around the U.S.), how much they cost, and which of some 1.5 million service providers did the work. The project’s home address is not shown, to preserve privacy.
    The 100,000 homeowners who have signed up to date can find a map showing projects in their area that service providers have listed, whether it’s a $5,000 roof repair or $50,000 kitchen remodel. Or they can browse photos for inspiration and build a scrapbook.They can also search for professionals for their specific project or repair. We haven’t been able to try out the site ourselves—Porch did not grant us early access—so we’ll provide an update when we get a look after launch.
  • Caveats: Ehrlichman says Porch is like a LinkedIn resume for service providers, which means the service providers control their profiles and are the source of all the key information. By design this is a “positive endorsement model,” says Ehrlichman. Unfortunately, then, what makes one professional seem better than another will be driven by how many endorsements he or she solicits and gets from customers. If you’re looking to learn about possible problems, you won’t find them here.
    This also means you must rely on the contractors themselves to tell you how good they are, in an industry that has historically not fostered much trust. For example, last year, 8.6 million consumers found it wise to inquire at the Better Business Bureau to check the reputations of roofing contractors, general contractors, plumbers, and construction/remodelers, who wound up in the top 10 for all BBB inquiries and rated 16th through 42nd, respectively, for complaints out of some 5,000 business categories tracked.
    Another problem: While Yelp and Angie’s List learned early on that bogus user reviews were an Internet reality that could undercut their credibility and can’t be ignored, Porch has no systems in place to guard against them. There are also no sanctions for service providers who get caught gaming the system, nothing to prevent contractors from buying endorsements with discounts or freebies, no background checks, and no mechanism that enables its 27 employees to verify the details of 1.5 million contractors and their 90 million projects in the system.
    “We don’t need it at this point. I absolutely imagine that we’ll have people that are actually working on this as we go on,” says Ehrlichman. 

Yelp

  • Years in business: 9
  • Structure: Publicly traded company
  • Cost for consumers: Free
  • How it works: Anyone can look up a company on Yelp to see its overall rating and individual reviewers’ ratings and comments. If you want to write a review, you need only set up a user name and provide your e-mail address and ZIP code. That creates a profile where your reviews are gathered. The more prolific you are, the more trusted and “known” you become in Yelp circles.
    Yelp uses software that aims to filter out bogus reviews and keep legitimate ones, but it hasn’t been objectively tested, says Kristen Whisenand, a company spokeswoman. About 70 percent of Yelp’s 36 million reviews have been posted unfiltered; 22.5 percent have been filtered and separated from the overall average rating for each company but can still be read if you want; and 7.5 percent have been deleted.
    Companies appear on Yelp involuntarily, but they can claim their page and gain access to tools that let them contact reviewers publicly or privately through the site to work out problems.
  • Caveats: A company’s ability to make amends with a negative reviewer—while good from a customer’s perspective—undercuts the integrity and accuracy of the ratings, because placated gripers can change their review at any time. “We see plenty of people go back and delete reviews or update them,” Whisenand says. Yelp can also remove reviews that businesses and individuals flag as violating content rules.
    Some data reveal that user reviews skew toward the positive. Researchers at the University of Texas at Dallas and California State University, Long Beach, found that people who rented movies online were five times more likely to post a positive review than a negative one. And 66 percent of Yelp’s reviews for the first quarter of 2013 were four or five stars. Services like Yelp could adjust their ratings to eliminate such measurable bias, but Yelp says it simply averages the raw unfiltered ratings to calculate a company’s overall score.
    Rated service providers can buy sponsored search results and put them at the top of the list for someone searching for, say, a restaurant in Los Angeles. That’s not unusual among search engines, and Yelp identifies the listing as sponsored, but that still gives one paid advertiser per search an advantage over the natural results that Yelp otherwise promises.

What about the Better Business Bureau?

The Better Business Bureau is not a review site, per se. Ratings result from the dispute-resolution process, and staffers verify that complainants are real customers. It also offers user reviews now, but they don’t factor into a company’s rating. Consumers can check BBB company ratings online, find details of individual complaints, and get help in mediating disputes that can’t be worked out directly with a company; they looked up businesses at bbb.org almost 125 million times last year.

  • Years in business: 101
  • Status: nonprofit
  • Cost for consumers: Free
  • How it works: Companies get a profile when a consumer files a complaint; 985,000 were logged last year. Ratings are calculated using a mathematical formula based on how the company responds to each complaint, how promptly, and how well it’s resolved. Complaint volume and patterns factor in, too. Businesses can also apply for BBB accreditation after they maintain a grade of B or higher, and if they pledge to adhere to BBB standards. Accreditation itself doesn’t influence the company’s grade but allows it to use the BBB logo in its marketing.
  • Caveats: Local companies aren’t the only ones subject to BBB scrutiny. Last March the BBB of Los Angeles was itself expelled from the national organization for failing to adhere to standards on handling complaints, accreditation, and reporting on businesses after a two-year investigation following a report by ABC’s “20/20” program. A new local BBB chapter has taken its place to repair the damage.

1 plumber, 5 ratings

Here’s how one plumbing business serving the San Francisco Bay area was rated by these services as of late July. (Porch launched after we looked at this plumbing service.)

Angie’s List: Overall grade of F on the strength of just one unhappy customer, who also gave the company the same failing grade for responsiveness and punctuality.
Better Business Bureau:
A+ rated; two complaints resolved; accredited BBB business since 2003.
Consumers’ Checkbook (Center for the Study of Services):
Of 63 consumers surveyed, 40 percent said it was “superior” for overall performance, 27 percent said it was “adequate,” and 33 percent rated it “inferior.”
Google+ Local:
No user reviews or ratings.
Yelp:
2.5 stars out of a maximum of 5 based on 20 reviews.

Editor's Note: This article appeared in the October 2013 issue of Consumer Reports Money Adviser.

Friday
Nov082013

Top 10 Ways to Take Your Media Collections Digital

Top 10 Ways to Take Your Media Collections Digital

There's nothing quite like the feel of a new book, the smell of an old record, or the joy of heading to the comic book store every Wednesday. Sometimes, though, those physical collections can be a burden—like when you're starved for space or want something more portable for traveling. Here are 10 forms of media you can take into the digital age.

10. Scan Photos to Your PC

Top 10 Ways to Take Your Media Collections DigitalExpand

You've probably already switched to a digital camera for most of the photos and video you take, but is any of it organized? And what about all your photos from the pre-digital days? If you have a flatbed scanner, take some time to scan those photos into your digital collection and touch them up. If you have the negatives, those can often produce better results, and this simple DIY negative scanner should work pretty well. Once you've got everything in digital, don't just leave it sitting around—come up with a good organization scheme, whether it's just in folders or using a photo management app like Picasa or Lyn.

 

9. Subscribe to Your Radio Shows as Podcasts

Top 10 Ways to Take Your Media Collections DigitalExpand

Radio may be convenient, but it doesn't offer many other advantages. If you have a lot of radio shows you really like, chances are they're already available online as podcasts, sometimes with pretty extensive archives. And, with the right app and a little configuration, you can turn all your favorite shows into a custom radio station that you can stream from anywhere, on your own time. Check out our favorite apps for iOS and Android, and our tips on how to supercharge your podcasts for more.

8. Play Your Video Games, Old and New

If you play video games on a PC, you've probably already started using steam to buy and organize them all—after all, why would you want to buy a disc, especially when online stores have such great sales? But when it comes to those classic games from your past, you may still have a few old systems knocking around. Those are great, but if you want to play on-the-go, you can turn your smartphone or tablet into a portable retro game arcade, or create one for your house that combines all those systems into one. You can even create your own retro arcade table for some serious playing.

7. Turn Your Recipes and Cookbooks Into a Digital Database

Top 10 Ways to Take Your Media Collections Digital

Everyone's gotta eat, and cooking for yourself is the ultimate way to save money and eat great food. But once you start building up a good collection of recipes, it can become hard to sort through. Either you've got a shelf full of cookbooks or a box full of disorganized recipe cards you have to hand-write yourself. Luckily, all those cookbook recipes are probably online somewhere, and you can import them right into a digital recipe organization or meal planning tool. Then you can search for the recipes you want, plan your meals for the week, and even create a grocery list from the ingredients. You'll never go analog again.

6. Read Your Newspapers and Magazines Online

Top 10 Ways to Take Your Media Collections Digital

Some of you digital mavens may scoff at those of us who still read old school newspapers and magazines, but they're perfect ways to catch up on news or keep yourself entertained when you don't have time to dig through RSS feeds or crawl Twitter. However, paper news does have one downside: it takes up a lot of space and wastes a lot of paper, especially once you start building up a collection. Luckily, going digital is easy: just grab your favorite news and magazine apps on your phone, tablet, or rooted ereader. Apple's Newsstand and Android's Google Play have some pretty great collections, and you can also get a lot of cheap magazines from apps like Zinio. If you're looking for old issues, you can often find them via Google Books or other sources. And when you're done, those old newspapers make great odor removers. Photo by Hector Alejandro.

5. Immortalize Your Journals, Drawings, and Other Personal Creations

Top 10 Ways to Take Your Media Collections Digital

Chances are you have a few old keepsakes lying around, from journals you wrote when you were younger to drawings and other projects. You probably don't want to get rid of these, and you shouldn't—but if you don't have room to store them nearby or want to make them easier to access, you can scan them in just like you do photos. Going forward, you might consider taking some of those hobbies ditigal—for example, it's really easy to keep a private journal online or get started with digital drawing. It lacks some of the emotion of pen-to-paper, but you can also do a lot of other cool stuff with it.

 

4. Consolidate Your Massive Comic Book Collection

Top 10 Ways to Take Your Media Collections Digital

If you're tired of digging through long boxes just to read a few of your old comics, it might be time to take them digital. You can subscribe to your favorite comics from companies like Marvel and DC with apps like ComiXology, or use a CBR reader for old, indie, or other scanned issues. Check out the best comic book readers for the desktop, iOS, and Android for more, and start collecting.

 

3. Load Up Your Ereader with Books

Top 10 Ways to Take Your Media Collections Digital

Physical books still have their time and place for sure, but when you don't want to carry around a giant tome like Lord of the Rings, an ereader is the perfect option. Not only can you load up on ebooks for free or cheap, but a lot of ebook apps actually enhance your reading experience by helping you keep track of characters, look up words and locations, search through text, translate it, and more. Check out the five best ebook stores for more, and if you have some ebooks lying around already, you can consolidate them and remove their DRM with Calibre for a truly organized collection.

2. Rip Your DVDs, Blu-Rays, and VHS Tapes

Top 10 Ways to Take Your Media Collections Digital

If your shelves are buckling under the weight of your massive DVD and Blu-Ray collection, maybe it's time to go digital. Maybe you've already started with a service like Netflix, but when it comes to the movies you already bought, you have a lot of choices for downsizing that physical collection. Our favorite method, though is ripping those discs and crafting your own personal library of movies on a home theater PC or set-top box. You probably know how to rip a DVD, and ripping Blu-Rays is almost as easy, so what are you waiting for? Analog formats like VHS are more complicated, but with the right equipment, it can be done.

 

1. Organize and Upgrade Your Massive Music Library

Top 10 Ways to Take Your Media Collections Digital

Okay, so you probably knew this was coming—in fact, you've probably already gone digital with most of your music collection anyways. Ripping CDs is a breeze, and music stores like iTunes and Amazon make it so easy to buy music you've probably ditched CDs altogether. But if your library's a little overwhelmed, it may be time to go clean it up a bit—get rid of stuff you don't want, make sure your metadata is all correct, and so on. Try out a new music player or upgrade those old, low-bitrate songs. Streaming services like Spotify and Rdio can get you pretty far, but they probably won't replace your library 100%. And if you do still have some analog music lying around—like old records—you can digitize and clean those up for your library too, so you can listen to them anywhere.

Top 10 Ways to Take Your Media Collections Digital

Wednesday
Jun262013

Stick It! STAND

Stick It!

by Alison

Name the variety of things you have used as a typing stand. The wall, with paper taped to it, is probably on your list – at least until the corners curl and you have to use more tape…and pull paint off the wall. My office phone used to sort of work. It would prop things up at least. Maybe you got one of those fancy ones that hangs off the monitor. Sure stinks if you need to type off of something that isn’t paper though. And of course there are the traditional typing stands that have a secure way to hold things down…which is inevitably in your way as you type.

What if you had a stand that sat upright next to you but didn’t require a holder on it? Try out Justick, $29.98 on Solutions.com,  and you will get exactly that. Things just stick…hence the name. The surface of the stand is electro-adhesion, meaning anything flat that you put on it sticks to it. The patented surface literally grabs the object. And no, it is not static electricity. Using 4 AA batteries, energy literally flows through the Justick. And batteries should last you about 18 months. So no worries. Keep those documents, pictures or articles upright as you need them and don’t hassle with makeshift stands anymore.

Stick It! » Coolest Gadgets

Monday
Jun242013

Amazon Subscribe and Save

Cool Tools: Amazon Subscribe and Save

When you buy things using Subscribe and Save, Amazon gives you a 15% discount. I have been using Subscribe and Save for years. I'm surprised so many of my Amazon-using friends have never heard about it. I use it to buy vitamins and supplements, trash bags, cat food, toilet paper, batteries, paper towels, ziploc sandwich bags, Magic Erasers, and dishwasher detergent. - Mark Frauenfelder

Amazon Subscribe & Save

Monday
May272013

Wi-Fi for Every Room in the Home

 

 
Wi-Fi for Every Room in the Home

The Securifi Almond looks almost like an obese Windows Phone.

The Securifi Almond looks almost like an obese Windows Phone.

Wi-Fi is awesome. But when the Wi-Fi signal is weak, it’s almost worse than having no signal at all. You see signal-strength bars, but you can’t connect. Or videos play, but with a lot of pauses. Or your e-mail program tries to download messages, but just hangs there.

I’ve always wondered about Wi-Fi range extenders — little $60 to $80 routerlike boxes that are supposed to grab a weak Wi-Fi signal and amplify it. Recently, I had the perfect chance to put one to the test.

My fiancée’s San Francisco apartment is a chain of rooms off a single hallway. Living room in front, then bedroom, then dining room, then kitchen. Her Wi-Fi base station sits in the living room at the front of the house. That’s where the cable company’s jack enters the apartment.

FDDP
The Times’s technology columnist, David Pogue, keeps you on top of the industry in his free, weekly e-mail newsletter.
Sign up | See Sample

Trouble is, in this old, stately building, the walls are thick and strong. By the time the Wi-Fi signal reached her bedroom, it was too flaky to use. Now and then, she could pull up Web sites or check e-mail, but video and music were out of the question. The dining room and kitchen had no Wi-Fi signal at all. That was a disappointment for a skilled chef who likes to listen to Spotify or Pandora as she cooks.

One possibility, of course, was to see about having a second router installed. But that would mean having the cable company install another jack. It seemed as if it would be faster, less expensive and less disruptive to get a Wi-Fi range extender — if those things really worked.

On Amazon, the highest-rated extender at the time I shopped in December was the Securifi Almond. It was billed as the first touch-screen router and range extender, and had strong customer reviews.

It looks great. Some of the range extenders seem to have been designed to be as ugly as possible — they look like, well, networking equipment — but this one looks almost like an obese Windows Phone, thanks to the colorful tiles on its touch screen. It’s very small (4.5 by 4.75 by 1.5 inches).

The touch-screen breakthrough is that you don’t need to connect the Almond to a computer — or to anything but a power outlet — to set it up. We placed it in the hallway outside the bedroom door; it sits nicely and nearly invisibly on the molding above the doorway. On the screen, I tapped the name of the existing Wi-Fi network, entered its password, waited about a minute, and that was it. Suddenly there was a new Wi-Fi network in the back half of the apartment, with the suffix “Almond” on the original network’s name.

This hot spot seems just as fast and capable as the real one, in the living room. My fiancée can now stream music or video, download files, do real work, everywhere in the apartment.

On her laptop, she has to switch manually to the Almond network when she moves into those rooms; my laptop usually hops onto it automatically when it wakes up.

The fine print: The Almond is also a regular router; that is, you can plug your cable modem into it to create a Wi-Fi hot spot. We didn’t use it in that configuration. If you do, note that its Ethernet jacks are not gigabit speed.

You should also know that rival range extenders are dual-band (they offer both 2.4 and 5 gigahertz bands, if you know what that means), whereas the Almond is 2.4 only. Rival extenders can cost less and offer more networking features.

But they’re also uglier and far more complicated to set up. The Almond does beautifully as a simple, effortless, attractive way for non-nerds to extend their hot spots into un-blanketed corners of the house.

http://pogue.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/03/07/wi-fi-for-every-room-in-the-apartment/?pagewanted=all