• @morrowind@lemmy.ml
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    1110 months ago

    It was my search engine for like two years. They really did do a lot of good stuff:

    • no ads
    • focus on community generated (reddit, forums) content over seo spam
    • special widgets for things like recipes/sports scores and even stack overflow
    • search your own content from e.g gmail (though I never trusted them enough to use this)
    • ability to rank sites
    • one of the first to implement AI results, with sources from the beginning

    Now I’m looking at kagi.com. They’ve basically been doing what neeva did, but better, and with more features. Plus they’re bootstrapped and sustainable instead of running on a VC money high like neeva was.

  • @lFenix@lemmy.ml
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    810 months ago

    It’s a shame how I always hear of these projects only when they’re announcing that they’re shutting down :(

  • @_edOP
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    510 months ago

    Can’t say I ever heard of it tbh.

    • alyaza [they/she]M
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      510 months ago

      i heard of this one years ago when it was first launched and then never again, which seems pretty indicative of the desire for new search engines. i just assumed it quietly folded due to the pandemic honestly, lol

      • 🦊 OneFluffyBoi 🦊
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        410 months ago

        @alyaza There is some interest among tech nerds, but that’s about it. The HackerNews crowd is pretty big on Kagi. But between SEO gentrification and large chunks of the internet retreating behind walled gardens, search engines just aren’t as good as they used to be.

        • alyaza [they/she]M
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          310 months ago

          it ultimately seems like a problem you have to solve at the source by just taking a wrecking ball to the benefits of pumping out spam. even the existence of SEO as a concept increasingly seems like a huge mistake we need to double back on