Give me good search, I’ll pay, but if you shovel dreck to sell a story to investors, imma bounce.
But even then, Google Search can still suck compared to Kagi, etc. For example, why do I not see relevant results for these searches?
https://www.google.com/search?q=inherit_errexit+site:www.gnu...
https://www.google.com/search?q=pipefail+site:www.gnu.org/so...
But I do see relevant results for the same searches using DuckDuckGo:
https://duckduckgo.com/?q=inherit_errexit+site:www.gnu.org/s...
https://duckduckgo.com/?q=pipefail+site:www.gnu.org/software...
I really dislike the AI slop at the top of Google search results. It is an annoying distraction that forces me to scroll past every single time, multiple times a day. Bing is just as bad with its LLM although it is also a worse search engine.
I think the next most significant milestone for this will be Siri and Google Assistant using this technology all the time. This, I think, will cause Gen Z to start leaving Google Search, and slowly, older Gens will follow.
Me personally? I can't handle Google Searches anymore. I started using Kagi and ChatGPT with the search module, but for things I need to be 100% sure about, I go to Kagi directly.
Having said that I haven't found a good pure search alternative.
As for using an LLM FOR search sometimes I do that but LLM's seem very fixated on maybe a dozen or so results in my experience and that's not entirely useful to me. LLM's seem really bad at iterating ... search for some reason. Code it can do but search it seems to just get stuck.
I'll ask it for a given application, open source, and it just spits out the same couple apps ... not open source and no amount of prompting will change that.
But, give it a try. It does have AI summaries (I find them quite helpful) but you can easily turn it off in settings if you don't like/want them.
https://search.brave.com/help/ai
Alternately, give the udm14 trick a try.
For years I had used DDG as my default search engine. Nowadays I prefer Bing. In either case, I haven't used Google search for well over a decade.
My favorite example is asking for the release date of some media. We've had to sift through ten paragraph articles filled with nonsense for years, just to see at the bottom that "the release date has not been announced yet".
2. No, per Google's Q4 earnings, people are still using Google more than ever.
I ended up moving to Ecosia anyway, as that was where I personally hit the tipping point of search becoming infrequent and a lot of additional Google work. Previously the cost of that was too high.
The major difference is asking first in a LLM instead of searching for a StackOverfow result. Other than that, not really a change.