You’re bang on. It’s called MaxDiff. I use it frequently in my line of work to prioritise product or service messaging with panel data. It’s better in some cases to use Inferred preference rather than stated, but generally good to keep the options comparable in “size” of offer.
I would never interpret a MaxDiff model low end result as “wow, 5% of people want slower browsers.” Instead I’m focusing on the top cluster. As with any model, they’re only ever so accurate. Don’t read into the questions too much.
It’s an Inferred importance method, as other users have commented it is likely that there are some calibration metrics in there. MaxDiff is the name of the approach if you want to check out more.
It was a day trip around Port Phillip bay in Melbourne, Victoria. This particular photo was near the Brisbane Ranges.
This was a morning ride I’ll never forget. For about ten minutes on this road I was riding towards a rainbow which seemed just around the corner. At one stage a hawk or eagle of some kind was scared out of the tree I was riding past and flew parallel to me for about 5 seconds.
Most importantly, after a 500km round trip mostly in the rain, I successfully returned home with a 1kg bag of heavily discounted coffee beans.
A cheapo film camera! Basically a disposable camera in terms of quality and technology, but you can reload the film instead.
I miss that game. Not much tickles the same creativity and playfulness that I’ve tried since then. I used to spend hours in the level creator doing dumb stuff.
Sure is