• joenforcer@midwest.social
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    1 year ago

    Google is not a search engine. It’s an advertising service. Their whole business model revolves around a critical mass of eyeballs, which flock to free services. This will never happen for the average user.

      • IninewCrow@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        If anyone ever figures out how to charge people service fees in the afterlife … there will be service fees in the afterlife

    • CosmoNova@feddit.de
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      1 year ago

      Eh, they’re turning Youtube into that and yet people buy premium so I would be careful to make any such predictions.

  • Stuka@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    I’m not sure you you understand how Google makes money…which would tell you why this would never happen.

  • Franzia@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    1 year ago

    If you say you’d pay for a search engine. Oof. Guys we used to just link useful things at the end of our blog posts and on our myspace pages. Then search engines came in and we didn’t have to. Then they killed the SEO placement of blogs. Now you can’t find anything useful unless you try their AI. The whole business model is convincing us we need them while they make the internet less efficient to scroll through.

        • Steeve@lemmy.ca
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          1 year ago

          There were a ton of search engines in the 90s around the same time Geocities was released. AskJeeves was probably the most popular, but there was Altavista, Lycos, Dogpile, Yahoo… Shit, Google came out in 97, which was only a few years after Geocities.

          • Senuf@lemmy.ml
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            1 year ago

            When I had my Geocities website, I used Webcrawler as my preferred search engine. Cute spider and spiderweb iso/logo. Then came Altavista (altavista.digital.com, it was at first) and I switched. It brought more and better results. Somehow I never liked Lycos. And Yahoo, the first years, was a categorised catalogue/guide, kinda curated, and you had to submit a site to be considered to be added. You had to choose under which category (and subcategory, quite often) it should be listed. Also, at first, it wasn’t Yahoo.com, it was buried in some .edu (or .ac, I don’t quite recall) URL.

      • Franzia@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        1 year ago

        I understand why you would pay and can respect it. But access to an organized and searchable internet is something closer to a right than a privilege, in my mind.

    • bobs_monkey@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      You just dated the hell out of yourself, but also showed how young you are at the same time.

      • Franzia@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        1 year ago

        Haha, I’m too young to really have lived it, I’m only 26 so… I did experience the start of Facebook and Twitter. I’m very glad people who did live through it are expanding on it.

        • bobs_monkey@lemm.ee
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          1 year ago

          Yeah it sounds like you got online right when Web 2.0 was starting to really kick off. Back before then we did have search functions, though they were pretty primitive compared to what they’ve become now (and also before they went to shit with excessive SEO and advertising). Web 2.0 really marked the emphasis towards UX design and social network functionality within web sites/design, though people had links on their personal pages well before all that.

    • CaptDust@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      Kagi is like google was 10 years ago though, useable and useful, while Google has morphed an SEO trashcan. I wouldn’t pay them any amount for current quality

  • drathvedro@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    This is literally how their search API works. Except the limit is more like 25 queries a day and the price would be closer to $40/mo for average user’s usage.

    • drathvedro@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      Just to clarify. The API pricing is 100 requests per day for free and $5 for every 1000 requests over that. But, the API is limited to 10 items per request. Their own UI provides up to 100 results per page (the setting seems to be hidden now, but is still active for users who set it before), which would require multiple requests to match, plus an image and/or video carousels each of which require an additional query, opening images tab preloads 50 images just to fill the screen, which is 4 more requests minimum for any image search, and, given how clicking each image also loads a bunch of related images, the estimate of 4 requests per search is very conservative. I use search on average about 80 times a day, and, doing the math, it would cost me on average $33.48 per month to do my searches using their API instead of using the free and unlimited official UI. This is ridiculous. And then twitter and reddit did exactly the same thing, too.