Why would something like Google search possibly be irrelevant?

well…

a lot of these search engines use search engine Optimization, seo to rank sites. It’s also not secret that they choose what shows up and what does not.

Things like that have been a thing for years, and since there wasn’t a good alternative search engines remained relevant as we users tolerated their direction.

Now you have Lemmy, Mastodon, Sharkey, Firefish (if it’s still a thing) connected to the Fediverse. On the Fediverse there is no such thing as looking up a website, but rather you look up actual specific content and get real results handed back to you. A lot of these Federated services are split and one person pays for hosting a smaller server, and the next another, slowly building up the bigger federated Fediverse.

On Lemmy you can just type in Windows 11, and no website to click on to, no bs, you get to hear about what’s happening with WIndows 11 from different voices. Is the *Windows cool, a tragedy, is there that one guy that *disfavors it, or is in favor of WIndows 11?

It’s all there and you as a user gets to decide for yourself if you like all the results you see, or some, or none of them and then move on with your day as it should be.

Thoughts? Opinions? Statements? Judge rulings?

  • SolidGrue@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    Search engines are good for what you might call “keyword searches” across websites. I’d say SEO spam has degraded quality of hits and made search results less reliable than even 5 years ago. There’s a lot more chaff to winnow now in the main search services. You sorta need to discriminate on hits, and dig a bit deeper into the results to find that new nugget you didn’t already see 3 or 4 times already in previous searches with similar, but different parameters.

    I find the LLM AIs to be slightly better at turning up obscure info these days. The conversation sets some persistent context that’s helpful when you need to dial in on obscure stiff like a driver issue, tuning problem or weird product spec. You still need to carefully vet your results, but the AIs understand technical jargon pretty well, and generally return some solid analysis for leas common scenarios.

    They’re also good for pick-and-shovel work in odd tech areas, but you really need to be careful with the results because they’re confidently wrong in speculative conversation only slightly more often than they’re confidently right.

    That’s just my opinion, but it’s how I do search these days: use an AI to refine keywords, then use DDG or Google to find familiar sites with corollary content.