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Quora has some okay answers sometimes but the boomer anecdotes are the best. Was looking for info on marine gearboxes, quora was the only place with real info but it was all hidden inside boomer stories "back when I was working in the Everglades..."I used Quora for a little bit a few years ago because I found a lot of the personal anecdotes amusing.
<https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9koJOCL8Bms>I think search has gotten worse. Maybe it's due to the increase in machine learning. Like how you can read text from a Marchov string generator and it sort-of look like a really book or what ever source text, but It's actually not meaningful. If the search results are just trying to mimic what people are searching for and not actually trying to identify the concept of the query it would fallow that the results are not human-meaningful. For example, if I search of chocolate cake and I get pictures of chocolate and cake but not chocolate cake I'm really not getting back what I'm looking for. It seems the algorithms have gone in the direction of just throwing a bunch of suggestions out without trying to match the query correctly.
All day I've been looking for this video, I think it was on Internet Archive, of lecture about programming and playing the electric clarinet. The lecture was about how music has changed it's timing abstraction a few times thought history and this can be metaphoric for how to write programs that use dependency injection. So the same way a piece of music can change timing systems so can your software change what it operates on while not changing the core logic. The guy doing the lecture looked like KingCobraJFS in his 50 or 60s. I really wish I could find it.
That's what Apple starting to do by default. In iOS 15 the built-in "Look Up" doesn't just redirect to Google anymore, but does its own lookup.It's gotten to the point I'll mostly skip google and just go to wikipedia.
Speaking of scifi, the animated Star Trek episode "The Infinite Vulcan" has the Japanese title of "惑星ファイロスの巨人" ("Planet Phylos' Giant"). Google Translate "translates" that as "The Infinite Vulcan of the Planet Phyllos" instead. Looks like Google Translate now can "translate" to the "English version" instead of translating.What did Google mean by this?
I'm guilty of adding "reddit" on my searches lately because the results are often clogged with pajeet spam blogs trying to sell you shit. But sometimes I notice Google would omit results coming from reddit on certain topics, I think stuff about health/meds and covid vax.
DDG shows things fine.
Why are people appending “reddit” to their queries?
There’s a fun conspiracy theory that popped up recently called the Dead Internet Theory. The claim is basically that most of the internet is bots. There aren’t real people here anymore.
IlluminatiPirate:
This isn’t true (yet), but it reflects some general sense that the authentic web is gone. The SEO marketers gaming their way to the top of every Google search result might as well be robots. Everything is commercialized. Someone’s always trying to sell you something. Whether they’re a bot or human, they are decidedly fake.TLDR: Large proportions of the supposedly human-produced content on the internet are actually generated by artificial intelligence networks in conjunction with paid secret media influencers in order to manufacture consumers for an increasing range of newly-normalised cultural products.
So how can we regain authenticity? What if you want to know what a genuine real life human being thinks about the latest Lenovo laptop?
You append “reddit" to your query (or hacker news, or stack overflow, or some other community you trust).
Google is dead.
Long live Google + “site:reddit.com”.
"The Brady Bunch" is "ゆかいなブレディー家" ("Happy Brady House"), but Google Translate "translates" it as "The Brady Bunch" instead.Looks like Google Translate now can "translate" to the "English version" instead of translating.
Reminds me of when I was trying to find the name of some French song.Here's a challenge:
You just can't mix a glowing lime green from CMYK inks. There's physically no way to get such a hue from mixing those inks because you're limited by the physics of light. To get special colors like that, you need to print with ready-mixed spot colors and a printing setup/software that supports handling them.Tried to search for why screen primaries and secondaries are different hues than the print counterparts.
All I got were the basics of CMYK vs RGB.
(It's almost as if Big Tech wants you to know only basic stuff, and never become an expert in anything.)
Here's a challenge:
Try to use a search engine to find the song that Keyboard Cat is playing.
The SEO is so tight the you'll only ever find the cat playing "a cheery tune" or "a tinny song" but never the same of the original. Even Wikipedia that has thousands of words about a 30 second video of a cat somehow "forgets" to mention it.
Maybe you can use an app like BeatFind to find your songs.Reminds me of when I was trying to find the name of some French song.
IIRC all I got was unrelated stuff and someone claiming on Quora that no one searches for songs using uploaded clips anymore.
I guess if one had a really saturated or fluorescent CMYK, one could make more colors.You just can't mix a glowing lime green from CMYK inks.
Just searched "play him off" with nothing else and found an extended clip with kids in it, I don't know if I was meant to find the song the cat plays or the full clip, but whatever.Here's a challenge:
Try to use a search engine to find the song that Keyboard Cat is playing.
The SEO is so tight the you'll only ever find the cat playing "a cheery tune" or "a tinny song" but never the same of the original. Even Wikipedia that has thousands of words about a 30 second video of a cat somehow "forgets" to mention it.
Totally. YouTube used to be really good for showing you related media. You could fall down a rabbit hole pretty easily. Now? The videos at the end of whatever I'm watching aren't related in any way. Just bullshit that's trending.I've complained about this with YT, but anyone else noticed more and more of this shit? "In-line" propaganda in your not-even-remotely-related search query:
I searched on YT the other day for a commentator who does not typically comment on US domestic politics and it was the same thing, 6 videos of commentator on war issues, 1 video of 'see new released shocking violent 1/6 footage', 6 or so more videos of said commentator, 1 more 1/6 video, etc, basically repeated the pattern several times.
Totally. YouTube used to be really good for showing you related media. You could fall down a rabbit hole pretty easily. Now? The videos at the end of whatever I'm watching aren't related in any way. Just bullshit that's trending.
That might be part of it. My youtube account is fairly new and I don't watch very much. I think they create a profile for you based on watching habits, and if there's not enough data you get whatever is trending.That's strange. YouTube still only recommends me stuff obviously related to videos I've been watching recently.