Other search engines are also available.
Nov. 29th, 2011 10:30 pmFor some reason - and I hope it's nothing serious, but my computer has been a little flaky of late, and I fear worse to come - all of the accounts I keep logged in have become logged out: LJ, Flickr, Amazon, I had to log back in to all of them.
And Google. After my last contretemps with Google (the one where it wanted to give me local results) I had found a combination of settings I could live with (the option of a puffin picture at the top of the screen sweetened the pill). That too had vanished, and I can't find it. I've found the link at the bottom of the screen which allows me access to google.com, but the puffins are gone, and there is an infuriating autocomplete feature which guesses what I might be going to type and supplies search results corresponding to its guesses, so that all the time I am trying to type, semi-random text flickers distractingly across the screen. This is weird and unpleasant, but I can turn it off, right?
Wrong. I look for the easy 'click here to opt out of this feature' button, and there isn't one; I google 'turn off autocomplete' and find this answer (from "Kelly, a Google employee"): "it's in keeping with our vision of a unified Google search experience to make popular, useful features part of the default experience, rather than maintain different versions of Google. As Autocomplete quality has improved, we felt it was appropriate to have it always on for all of our users."
What can I say? So I'm trying alternative search engines. Currently using Bing, recommendations gratefully received.
And Google. After my last contretemps with Google (the one where it wanted to give me local results) I had found a combination of settings I could live with (the option of a puffin picture at the top of the screen sweetened the pill). That too had vanished, and I can't find it. I've found the link at the bottom of the screen which allows me access to google.com, but the puffins are gone, and there is an infuriating autocomplete feature which guesses what I might be going to type and supplies search results corresponding to its guesses, so that all the time I am trying to type, semi-random text flickers distractingly across the screen. This is weird and unpleasant, but I can turn it off, right?
Wrong. I look for the easy 'click here to opt out of this feature' button, and there isn't one; I google 'turn off autocomplete' and find this answer (from "Kelly, a Google employee"): "it's in keeping with our vision of a unified Google search experience to make popular, useful features part of the default experience, rather than maintain different versions of Google. As Autocomplete quality has improved, we felt it was appropriate to have it always on for all of our users."
What can I say? So I'm trying alternative search engines. Currently using Bing, recommendations gratefully received.
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Date: 2011-11-30 12:31 am (UTC)Ixquick <https://s9-eu.ixquick.com/> is a metasearch engine that gives very good results. It is big on privacy (it does not record IP addresses), and has a built-in proxy service for those times when one doesn't want to give away one's IP address/location.
Scroogle <http://www.scroogle.org/cgi-bin/scraper.htm> is also big on privacy. It scrapes Google for results free of ads and annoying interference. If you want Google without 'Personal Search' and other annoying gimmicks, it is very useful.
I used to use Clusty, now rebranded as Yippy, quite a lot. <http://search.yippy.com/>. It is another metasearch engine: its feature is that it clusters the results in a sidebar, so that results that contain the same keywords are grouped together. This is sometimes extremely useful. A year or two back it was bought by a company setting up an all-American 'family friendly' portal site. It censors results now. I don't use it nearly as much as I used to, but if you search under, say, 'John Smith' and want to quickly separate out results featuring Captain John Smith the early American colonist from items relating to John Smith, Labour Party leader, it definitely has its value.
IceRocket <http://www.icerocket.com/> is a good blog search engine. Better than Google's blog search, I think.
I also use Bing and Yahoo. I like to keep changing. Throws up different sites.
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Date: 2011-11-30 08:09 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-11-30 07:42 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-11-30 08:09 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-12-01 06:49 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-12-01 06:12 pm (UTC)