david42
Member of DD Central
Posts: 419
Likes: 346
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Post by david42 on May 23, 2016 23:49:04 GMT
Yep, you don't have to get it right for heavens sake, you just have to tick at least 3 boxes in the half-a$$ed fashion which suggests you are a confused human. Heck, even a bot can do it. 8>. One suspects that some of the street number and shop front pix were taken by Google's self drive car AFTER it was in the accident. 8>. I thought we did have to get it right. If I make a mistake, Google punishes me with "Multiple correct solutions required". To test this I have just tried choosing a single incorrect image along with two correct images and I got the punishment immediately. Do you have a different experience?
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cooling_dude
Bye Bye's for the PPI
Posts: 2,853
Likes: 4,298
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Post by cooling_dude on May 23, 2016 23:59:38 GMT
Yep, you don't have to get it right for heavens sake, you just have to tick at least 3 boxes in the half-a$$ed fashion which suggests you are a confused human. Heck, even a bot can do it. 8>. One suspects that some of the street number and shop front pix were taken by Google's self drive car AFTER it was in the accident. 8>. I thought we did have to get it right. If I make a mistake, Google punishes me with "Multiple correct solutions required". To test this I have just tried choosing a single incorrect image along with two correct images and I got the punishment immediately. Do you have a different experience? I would imagine your test was with the early " easier" puzzles, where google knows exactly what they are giving you. It's the later puzzles, with blurry images (the street signs, shop fronts etc) where 2 of the pictures google know is correct and require you to pick them while the 3rd picture is "Click what you want"; that 3rd picture is just google indexing it's images for their images & maps service. I quite often get the storefronts puzzle, with about 5 storefronts in one puzzle. The puzzle actually asks you to pick ALL the storefronts, but it doesn't matter if you pick 3 or all 5 pictures, as long as you pick two of the most obvious ones first (it's often the 2 clearest pictures).
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david42
Member of DD Central
Posts: 419
Likes: 346
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Post by david42 on May 24, 2016 0:38:15 GMT
I thought we did have to get it right. If I make a mistake, Google punishes me with "Multiple correct solutions required". To test this I have just tried choosing a single incorrect image along with two correct images and I got the punishment immediately. Do you have a different experience? I would imagine your test was with the early " easier" puzzles, where google knows exactly what they are giving you. It's the later puzzles, with blurry images (the street signs, shop fronts etc) where 2 of the pictures google know is correct and require you to pick them while the 3rd picture is "Click what you want"; that 3rd picture is just google indexing it's images for their images & maps service. I quite ofter get the storefronts puzzle, with about 5 storefronts in one puzzle. The puzzle actually asks you to pick ALL the storefronts, but it doesn't matter if you pick 3 or all 5 pictures, as long as you pick two of the most obvious ones first (it's often the 2 clearest pictures). Yes. My test was on the easier puzzles. I have given up doing the difficult ones. I have a slow PC and once Google starts on the slower puzzles I find it is usually quicker to abandon the whole tab and start again with a fesh tab, when Google goes back to the easier puzzles.
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