top | item 2875570

Show HN: We built Callroulette, a chatroulette for phones

76 points| shaddi | 14 years ago |tier.cs.berkeley.edu | reply

29 comments

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[+] jericsinger|14 years ago|reply
If you read through, this actually has a super interesting purpose. From the site:

>Why are we doing this?

Our research group is interested in the use of technology for development. We are building a low-cost, low-power cell phone base station platform for deployment in underserved areas. Once you set up your own cell phone tower, you can do a lot of cool things, like run a chatroulette service.

In this particular project, we are studying how choice and context affect the quality of online interactions. We will be deploying this service in a small isolated cell phone network at an upcoming event where we expect to have several thousand users. We're hoping the Internet can help us test how our system performs under load before the real deployment so we can work out all the bugs.

[+] ericb|14 years ago|reply
> In this particular project, we are studying how choice and context affect the quality of online interactions

Sounds like a psych study to me...

[+] samstave|14 years ago|reply
Absolutley no interest in being connected with a random via voice. I cant stand to talk on the phone to anyone as it is...

I am sure there is a wide swath of youth though who would think this is fun/funny... I just cannot say that they would have anything in common with myself.

You know what would be an interesting pivot on this though;

ServiceRoulette:

You need a service - and you have the system connect you randomly with that service over the phone. Afterwards - you rate your experience and the connected service gets a weighting.

This could be used for reservations, support, plumbers, whatever - where the people need a service and there are lots of options to choose from.

You seed the service with info from sites like Yelp weighting the connection based on proximity to the caller and the positive reviews on Yelp.

They basically put their service order in on a page and receive a call from the provider.

They could set a "ill pay X for Y service" sort of thing as well...

Anyway, jsut being randomly connected to a creep for voice chat just seems like a waste of energy...

[+] IsaacL|14 years ago|reply
My Galaxy has this "feature". For some reason it's recently started to occasionally call or text a different person to the one I selected. Hilarity ensues. I call it the "iPhone Shuffle".
[+] irrumator|14 years ago|reply
The trolls have already got in, there's some guy who's screaming PENIS PENIS PENIS PENIS PENIS all day.
[+] justinhj|14 years ago|reply
Financial institutions selling new types of credit cards thought this was invented years ago
[+] theIntuitionist|14 years ago|reply
When I worked for the Exploratorium as an exhibit developer a few years ago, I wrote some software that operated a real life "game of telephone". A voice modem randomly called phone numbers. If somebody answered the system told them they where playing a real life game of telephone, and that they were about the hear the previous callers message and to repeat it after the beep. Messages were posted to a website. I looooved that project. Never really worked, though. Most people just hung up. I think if you tweaked on it, you could get it to work- perhaps by soliciting numbers from the site, so you were aware that such a system might call you, etc. Anyway, phone mayhem = fun!
[+] _aes|14 years ago|reply
I built this very same thing about 4 months ago: http://phoneshuffle.com

I didn't try very hard to promote it so it never passed the tipping point for adoption; too many people called in and had no one to talk to.

[+] shaddi|14 years ago|reply
Yeah, that's the tricky part. It took a couple revisions in front of users to figure out the right way to do bootstrapping.
[+] robbiea|14 years ago|reply
I like it. I also created something similar called friendlyaudio.com - similar concept but more towards matching people, and this is all over the internet - no phone #'s
[+] alecco|14 years ago|reply
Blind people would likely appreciate it. Why don't you forward this to some schools for the blind?
[+] ComputerGuru|14 years ago|reply
Why would blind people appreciate this any more or less than seeing people would?
[+] matmann2001|14 years ago|reply
Great, I can't wait to hear what the verbal equivalent of a man pleasuring himself sounds like.
[+] fletchowns|14 years ago|reply
Don't know that I agree with the downvoter. When I had tried Chatroulette after it first became popular it was literally like a 1 in 4 chance you are going to be looking at a dude masturbating. If you are going to go public with a system like this, you have to have an effective moderation system in place for it to even have a chance.
[+] choogi|14 years ago|reply
This is a really cool idea. I can't wait for more people to start using it :)
[+] aculver|14 years ago|reply
Definitely give this a shot if for no other reason than to hear the hold music. It was only funnier that it played right after being asked to hang up if I was under the age of 18.
[+] prayag|14 years ago|reply
Woah!! Wasn't expecting this here. I guess facebook/google+ wasn't a good enough stress test? Are you guys thinking of making this into a venture?
[+] sliverstorm|14 years ago|reply
Is this notably different from the old pen-and-phonebook method? (drop phonebook on floor, close eyes, stab page with pen)
[+] jules|14 years ago|reply
Yes, instead of being connected to somebody who doesn't want to talk you'll be connected with somebody who does.
[+] reustle|14 years ago|reply
Twilio had demos that used this concept as well
[+] chefsurfing|14 years ago|reply
Just like chat roulette... mostly dudes.
[+] glimcat|14 years ago|reply
Instead of random penises, you get Prince Albert in a can?

Not that I wouldn't have fun mining the transcripts.