Okay, Quizilla is really cool, and power to the people to make their own quizzes, but damn if Sturgeon’s Law doesn’t apply to this, too.
Folks — you want to play in the big leagues? At least look like you’re trying to follow conventions of spelling, capitalization, and other tweaky grammar stuff like that. Yeesh.
Now, excuse me while I yell at those darned kids to get off the lawn again …
(As minor proof of my thesis, compare the list above to the list of Most Popular Quizzes. I rest my case.)
I have to say, Quizilla IS cool. Not sure what I’ll use it for, but I’m sure I can come up with something…
My first effort out was both more work and less work than I’d imagined. The programing part was easy; the test-writing and graphic-creatiion parts were more time-consuming.
I don’t know when I’ll do another one — I’d have to think about something popular enough to be interesting, that I know well enough to write the test to, and which hasn’t been done to death. I suppose I could do something comic-book related (“Which JLA member are you?”), but I think I’ll let this one digest for a while.
I know what you mean. One funny one might be, “Which Blogger Are You Like?”
🙂
Agreed about the more/less work.
I’m not keen on the interface — and it’s brutal to a first time user who doesn’t understand how the “composition” works.
OTOH, popularity be ‘demmed’ it is fun.
http://quizilla.com/users/Arref/quizzes/
Problem with the “Which Blogger” quiz is having conclusions that folks would recognized. I’ve seen some of that sort, and when I got to the end, I scratched my head, went to the person’s page for the first time, scratched my head again, and went on with my day.
I could wish that, since Quizilla can export an XML version of the quizzes, there was the facility to import them as well. I’d rather compose offline then upload.