Skip to main content

Quora Browse does a little clean up for the Q&A site

Quora BrowseQ&A remains a somewhat confusing, muddled platform that retains a mix of highly devoted users and occasional wanderers. But Quora in particular has struck a chord and become a hub of industry insiders who use the site to glean details about the tech community and occasionally post novel-length answers.

While a niche following is nice, widespread user appeal is better. First-time visitors often feel isolated by the site’s user interface, and the conversations are sometimes so specific that it almost makes you want to go to Yahoo Answers for anything you’re worried would be seen as simplistic. To this end, Quora is obviously trying to user-friendly up its layout and draw in a different crowd.

To address the slew of unanswered questions that plague the site, Quora has introduced a bartering system where you turn Q&A into a game and can request specific users to answer your questions. And now the site has launched a browse feature to give users new and old alike a jumping off point. The site’s increasingly being used for research, and you can often  find comments and insights from incredibly relevant resources (like Robert Scoble, Fred Wilson, and even Mark Zuckerberg) by trolling Quora.

Browse takes some of the grunt work out of it, with icons and popular topics arranged in a grid. Clicking on the respective icon reveals popular questions about the topic. The site is clearly evolving from its almost encyclopedia-like origins, into something more eye-catching and dare we say it, easier to use for newbies. The element of exclusivity might be fading a bit with the site’s new approachability, but we don’t think that will have any effect on the actual content. Which means Quora may have struck a compromise that will lure new users without isolating its old ones, something many doubted it could do

Editors' Recommendations

Topics
Molly McHugh
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Before coming to Digital Trends, Molly worked as a freelance writer, occasional photographer, and general technical lackey…
How to create multiple profiles on a Facebook account
A series of social media app icons on a colorful smartphone screen.

Facebook (and, by extension, Meta) are particular in the way that they allow users to create accounts and interact with their platform. Being the opposite of the typical anonymous service, Facebook sticks to the rule of one account per one person. However, Facebook allows its users to create multiple profiles that are all linked to one main Facebook account.

In much the same way as Japanese philosophy tells us we have three faces — one to show the world, one to show family, and one to show no one but ourselves — these profiles allow us to put a different 'face' out to different aspects or hobbies. One profile can keep tabs on your friends, while another goes hardcore into networking and selling tech on Facebook Marketplace.

Read more
How to set your Facebook Feed to show most recent posts
A smartphone with the Facebook app icon on it all on a white marble background.

Facebook's Feed is designed to recommend content you'd most likely want to see, and it's based on your Facebook activity, your connections, and the level of engagement a given post receives.

But sometimes you just want to see the latest Facebook posts. If that's you, it's important to know that you're not just stuck with Facebook's Feed algorithm. Sorting your Facebook Feed to show the most recent posts is a simple process:

Read more
How to go live on TikTok (and can you with under 1,000 followers?)
Tik Tok

It only takes a few steps to go live on TikTok and broadcast yourself to the world:

Touch the + button at the bottom of the screen.
Press the Live option under the record button.
Come up with a title for your live stream. 
Click Go Live to begin.

Read more