Reviews can be difficult to turn into actionable data. By making it easier to write structured review, details can be emphasized and effectively responded to. The rise of micro-reviews is in part a response to the fast-paced nature of online communication and the desire for quick, easily digestible information.
Micro-reviews are concise and brief reviews that provide a quick overview or assessment of a product, service, book, movie or any other subject. These reviews are characterized by their brevity and often focus on capturing the essence of the reviewed item in a limited number of words or characters.
Moodle is simply a micro-review written in a structured manner using special keywords.
Take a look at the Cheatsheet for available commands.
A moodle channel keeps track of micro-reviews on the same topic (hashtag). Since each hashtag in a moodle is a link to a moodle channel each subsequent hashtag within the same moodle represent a subchannel. To get a better feeling how this works play around with the example playground.
Simply type multiple consecutive hashtags e.g. #Movies #SherlockHolmes #RobertDowneyJr great performance as Sherlock.
A moodle is capped at 500 characters, but you can extend this limit by linking multiple submoodles together, effectively increasing the character count in increments of 500. This limitation encourages more concise, structured micro-reviews by requiring the use of multiple hashtags to accommodate longer reviews.
A moodle channel keeps track of the average rating, total positive, negative and neutral feelings, total submoodles and rating votes. Moodles can be filtered by statistics.
Official channels refer to channels created by administrators or representatives e.g. for a specific product and it enables them to address inquiries related to the channel through the reach-out feature. These channels may contain in-depth details about products or category items, like movies or artists. To differentiate these channels from regular Moodle channels, they are identified by the use of "@" in their channels, including any subsequent subchannels. For instance music/@/coldplay/@/GhostStories/@/Magic represents an official channel for the Coldplay song Magic which is a product of the official channel Coldplay. Furthermore, official channels can be connected to aggregated statistical data from comparable Moodle channels, providing enhanced insights.
By clicking the rating badge you can rate a moodle channel without writing a moodle.
Click any thumbnail in the moodlecard and select from a range of thumbnails.
There is currently a limit to how many thumbnails can be generated by a Moodist per month. If you reach the limit a default thumbnail will be used. You will get a new thumbnail quote-a next month.
On the moodlecard click the options button and select the Report option.
If you can't find a moodle you wrote, it has most likely been reported and removed.
Please write constructive moodles. Learn more
On the moodlecard click the options button and select to share the moodle. A sharing dialog opens where you can select from multiple sharing providers.
On the moodlecard click the options button and select to edit the moodle. The moodleeditor opens where you can edit your moodle. Click save when done.
In the Moodle editor there is a category icon in the top right corner. Select the option Anything to remove the category or choose another category option.
Mentions are currently not supported.
Currently, the average rating is only influenced by your initial rating. Removing or updating your rating won't alter the average rating.
To delete your account along with all your moodles go to the profile menu and select settings. In the settings dialog select Delete my account.
For more questions or feedback please contact us via the feedback form or find us on Bluesky and X (Twitter)