Whenever I mention Kagi is actually better, someone will claim the opposite.
So yesterday someone here said something along the lines of: "With apologies to Bill Buxton every user interface is best at something and worst at something else".
So I started looking on Kagi and only found a few results, even if I took parts of it, but I narrowed it down to that the original must have been about "every input".
Guessing that Kagi had excluded a few results so I tried in Google (Googles usual problem is adding things I never asked for and I wondered if Kagi had become overzealous or something).
I'm not sure I'd agree the other two are spam. One of them is a plain-text transcript of some sharepoint files that mentions the quote and attributes them to the same person. The other is the same powerpoint, but in its original on some slide sharing website.
In many cases, either would be a great result. Here it still gives us the direct quote and confirms that all the way back in 2013 somebody attributed it to the same guy. That's a great lead if you try to track down the origin of a quote. If you cared enough you could now contact the person who made the slides to track the quote further.
I don‘t understand why this is bad. Aggregation is a feature because it allows to be no worse than Google, in my experience likely better, and you pay for search with money and not with data.
Whenever I mention Kagi is actually better, someone will claim the opposite.
So yesterday someone here said something along the lines of: "With apologies to Bill Buxton every user interface is best at something and worst at something else".
So I started looking on Kagi and only found a few results, even if I took parts of it, but I narrowed it down to that the original must have been about "every input".
Guessing that Kagi had excluded a few results so I tried in Google (Googles usual problem is adding things I never asked for and I wondered if Kagi had become overzealous or something).
So here are the results from Google:
https://www.google.com/search?q=%22Every+input+is+best+at+so...
For me Google says:
Meanwhile Kagi gives me a few relevant results:https://kagi.com/search?q=%22Every+input+is+best+at+somethin...
So now, while Kagi has always been a lot better at not including unwanted results, it now seems it also has a larger effective index than Google.