• MystikIncarnate@lemmy.ca
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    11 minutes ago

    As an IT professional, it’s getting harder to find what I need from Google.

    At the same time, it’s borderline impossible to find what I need from other search engines, most of the time, and it’s downright stupid to ask AI about it, because it will always give you an easy answer that doesn’t work using controls that don’t exist.

    Yay?

  • PearOfJudes@lemmy.ml
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    2 hours ago

    Yes. Big Tech in general is pretty bad, at least the software side. (Except for Steam, my beloved.)

  • BilSabab@lemmy.world
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    3 hours ago

    More like the destruction of shadow libraries make education way worse because you can’t find a lot of stuff otherwise.

  • imetators@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    5 hours ago

    I do not find LLMs much great right now. But there been a few instances where googling or searching would yield me no useful results but somehow ChatGPT had a suggestions for problems that I want to solve and it delivered me solutions that actually did work.

    Also, there has been couple of times where I had no idea where to start when researching topics of my interests. When trying to post on reddit with a question, these usually come off sort of gate-keeping-like or tried to steer me into direction I didn’t want to go. ChatGPT, on the other hand, gave out options. And, since recently, (dunno, in 2021-2022 it wasn’t doing so) also gave sources too.

    In any case, searching in google without adding “reddit” to a promt 99% of the time gives bullshit options with shit ass quora usually at the top. Who dafuq uses quora? Never found a single useful post there.

    • Jumbie@lemmy.zip
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      2 hours ago

      I’ve gotten useful information from Quora before but then it became shit.

      It coincided with a bunch of MAGA/Antivax morons invading the place when Reddit shut down their hate-subs. They have opinions that masquerade as fact on every topic.

      There are still pockets of useful spaces the same way Reddit still has some niche subs with good experiences to yet be had.

    • thermal_shock@lemmy.world
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      2 hours ago

      I searched how to reset an anker speaker yesterday, all the AI website bullshit at the top of the page was completely wrong. Had to actually find the manual online and look it up. Finally found the answer after 2 completely wrong AI solutions. I don’t use AI, I just went off the search results where it shows a brief answer at the top of the page. I despise AI bullshit.

      • imetators@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        2 hours ago

        I see your point. It’s just for me worked couple of times well.

        Example: I have hardware Steam Link hooked up to my TV. It had this issue where screen would freeze but game/audio would continue on, but menu would work half a time if not in game. I tried to look up the issue and found no lead. Adding “reddit” didnt help either. Only vague discussions, and dead-end leads.

        ChatGPT prompt gave me couple of options where the 2nd option was to disable hardware encoding which fixed my issue.

        I went to google same issue right now and still google results on 1st page have nothing about hardware encoding which was an actual fix. 1st link is to reddit where people say hardware encoding didn’t help so I disregarded this fix. Others claim that downgrading gpu drivers solve this issue. It didn’t.

        I’d rather google. But lately quality of results are incredibly low.

        • thermal_shock@lemmy.world
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          1 hour ago

          It’s intentional. Hiding what you’re looking for makes you search more pages and see more ads. Google results turning to dogshit.

    • Whats_your_reasoning@lemmy.world
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      4 hours ago

      bullshit options with shit ass quora usually at the top. Who dafuq uses quora?

      I wonder the same thing. I used it once, and only once, in my life. I had been trying to find vegan birthday candles and having no luck finding sources for the wax (since I was explicitly avoiding beeswax), so I asked Quora where I could find vegan candles. The answer I got?

      “Don’t eat birthday candles.”

      Uhhh…

      Apparently whatever fool worked there had no idea that “vegan” is a lifestyle, that goes beyond food. The question was closed and I had no way to appeal or add information. Fantastic.

      • greedytacothief@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        4 hours ago

        Hmm, I would assume most candles are vegan being made of either paraffin or soy wax. Bees wax tends to be more expensive since it takes a long time for bees to make wax. The flame from bees wax is also smaller and less bright. Am I wrong about this assumption?

        • BeMoreCareful@lemmy.world
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          3 hours ago

          I don’t think you are. I’m pretty sure the default would be a cheaper alternative to beeswax.

          I don’t guess they don’t have to list the ingredients though, so it would be hard to know it was vegan.

  • skisnow@lemmy.ca
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    11 hours ago

    This is one topic I’m quite willing to go into conspiracy theory territory on, because Google have a lot of very clever engineers and must surely know that their search is dogshit.

    The only plausible explanation is that they’re somehow making more money doing this than they did by being quietly competent.

  • psycotica0@lemmy.ca
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    11 hours ago

    I know everyone complains about it, but fuck Google’s results have been absolute dogshit lately. I’ll write a query with like 5 or 6 words, and the results will make it clear it took about 3 of them and turned them separately into synonyms, ignored the other 2 completely, and then gave me a bunch of results that contain literally none of the words I asked for and are irrelevant to my search.

    They even helpfully highlight words I didn’t ask for in the digest!

    Sometimes I can still influence it into giving me what I want with some judicious use of quotes or something, but even that doesn’t always work these days. Sometimes I’ll search something like “Linux suspend bug” or something and it’ll give me results that don’t have Linux in it, and then there’ll be a little blurb under the result being like “yeah, this one doesn’t have Linux in it. Do you want that?”

    Yeah! I gave you like 3 words, and you decided to show me results that ignored the most discriminating word I gave you? Yeah, use it, that’s why I typed it!

    It’s like they tuned the engine to work on the terrible queries my relatives would type 10 years ago, and in so doing ruined my ability to be deliberate and precise…

  • monotremata@lemmy.ca
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    11 hours ago

    I ran into this just yesterday. My dad’s Windows 10 computer was reporting our printer as offline, even though it wasn’t; it would queue print jobs, but never actually send them. It did this even though it had been printing normally less than half an hour beforehand. It’s connected over Wi-Fi.

    And I remembered having solved this problem once before, ages ago (I think like twelve years ago?), by digging through the old Microsoft forums and Google search results, and I had a dim recollection of what sort of thing the solution had been, but not the details. So I figured that, most likely, the fix had gotten undone, probably when I switched him to IoT LTSC edition so he could keep getting security updates. (Both my parents were basically unwilling to switch to 11.)

    But when I pulled up search on a browser to see if I could reconstruct the solution I’d found all those years ago, instead I got all this SEO and AI slop. Page after page that claimed to have relevant information, and didn’t. After about fifteen minutes I decided I was better off trying to dig through the settings myself and see if I could reconstruct it from my own memory, kind of like driving through an old neighborhood and seeing if I recognize any landmarks.

    I did manage to fix it that way. There’s some kind of dumb aspect to the way Windows gauges whether a printer is online that doesn’t work if it’s connected over wifi. The workaround is to go into the properties for the printer, tell it to change the settings (which brings up a very similar-looking but not actually the same panel), go to the “ports” tab, scroll down to the TCP/IP port with the address of the printer, choose “configure port” which brings up yet another dialog, and at the bottom of that check the box marked “SNMP enabled.” SNMP is “Simple Network Management Protocol,” and lets Windows check the status of the printer in a more sane manner. After doing this the printer reports itself as online and prints normally.

    But yeah, I had to rely on my rotting meat storage because our global worldwide network of supercomputers now only serves up blather designed to look like it might hold solutions but not actually contain any of them, because it’s more profitable to delude you into reading endless ad-filled pages of slop than to solve your problem and let you leave.

  • SaraTonin@lemmy.world
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    7 hours ago

    I tend to use perplexity now. It gives me useful results maybe 80% of the time. That’s a low hit rate, but for many queries it’s better than other search engines.

    Or i just search a dedicated site. If I’m looking for an overview of something i search Wikipedia directly. If i want to know what an actor has been in i stretch IMDb directly. And so on.

  • Caveman@lemmy.world
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    7 hours ago

    Google is bad now but we have more powerful tools than Google ever was. LLMs are good for an overview of whatever skill or research you’re doing as long as it’s a common skill.

    Then you have YouTube which takes some navigating but there are a lot of YouTubers that cover recent papers and studies in a field they have a degree in.

    Those two together can pretty much give you a road map towards learning a skill. I’d personally avoid all short form videos since explanations will either be oversimplified and they “give you the fish” instead of teaching you how to fish.

      • Caveman@lemmy.world
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        58 minutes ago

        That’s fair, but looking at papers is not really a good entry point for people getting into skills specifically. For information the GOAT it’s always Wikipedia but skills is trickier.

        Getting into car repairs, plumbing, woodworking and more can be done with YouTube and is frequently recommended by people in the trades.

        Getting into running is and weightlifting is also pretty good with YouTube since you have “Göran Winblad” physio and a running coach which does some quality content and “House of hypertrophy” is just weightlifting research news and he makes sure to mention caveats, holes in the research etc.

        Notably bad examples are programming and guitar playing which offer close to no value in my opinion but I’ve heard some people have had success with it. However when you get into music theory YouTube becomes good again.

        So in general LLM for basic info on what exists, YouTube for some examples on how to do it but the other >90% should always be practice.

  • 𞋴𝛂𝛋𝛆@lemmy.world
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    21 hours ago

    DDG is fucking awful now. I took a break from hardware design for the last 5 years. Coming back to it now, finding information like I did in the past is fucking impossible. Search results are 2 dimensional fuckwit level stupidity with no abstractive salting for depth or peripherally useful results. The results heavily favor commercially motivated stupidity. They do not cross into forums or social spaces where there is a wealth of information. The lack of depth is clearly manipulative for adversarial AI training.

    I run my own models and I know alignment thinking at a very advanced level, and have done my own training and fine tuning. Search results are intentionally poisoning any form of data mining for AI training. In so doing they have totally destroyed the informative value that made these companies useful in the first place. I do not hate AI, quite the opposite. I despise the fuckwits managing these companies and their complicit developers.

    Freedom of information is the most important foundation of democracy. Without it, democracy cannot exist. The obfuscation of search results is absolutely treason and should be prosecuted vigorously.

    The same applies to AI alignment. Anything unrelated to the scientific AI Alignment Problem is immoral treason against democracy. To say anyone is not allowed access to information of any sort, no matter how offensive to some, is fascist authoritarianism. Democracy prosecutes those that cause substantive harm to other citizens. It is the freedom to know, and to choose for yourself.

    • Tollana1234567@lemmy.today
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      7 hours ago

      I was using DDG for certain “sites” and it stopped showing more results than normal. so there was only a limited amount sites. originally it was showing a ton different sites of the same thing i was searching, but recently it showed the most generic and mainstream sites multiple times, a sprinkle of some defunct ones and then it stops the list early.

    • bluemoon@piefed.social
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      4 hours ago

      i’m a recommendation’s person, okay. i don’t know much about searchengines and AI.

      would the peer to peer searchengine YaCy be of use against this current deluge of sloppy searchresults?

      https://yacy.net/

    • Jankatarch@lemmy.world
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      20 hours ago

      At this point I am wondering if I should pay for one of those $30/month search engines just to be sure they won’t put only sponsored sites to visible areas.

      Problem with that is experience tells me subscription model products always go worse over time.

      • 𞋴𝛂𝛋𝛆@lemmy.world
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        20 hours ago

        There are only 2 relevant web crawlers that everyone inferences either directly or indirectly. Everything is going through Google or Microsoft. These are not providing deterministic results. It is quite likely that there is no such thing as private results. If two people using two separate devices can get different results for the same query, there is no freedom of information and democracy is dead. Paying any privateer overlord to make the fascist system more palpable is pointless.

  • blave@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    Worse yet, people are starting to use AI chat bots as Google, and frequently getting the wrong answer and/or inaccurate information

    • Lemming6969@lemmy.world
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      2 hours ago

      This was always the case. Most people couldn’t Google factual info previously either… I’d almost be willing to argue the rate AI is wrong might actually be less than the previous rate of the average person left to “do your own research” …

      But it’s also possible AI being fed presupposed answers embedded in the questions combined with prevalence of disinformation farms + no scientific consensus truth authority could lead to an ouroboros effect, greatly amplifying bullshit seekers and magical thinkers over time.

    • Tollana1234567@lemmy.today
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      7 hours ago

      and google is pedaling REDDIT questions whom they are in bed together with OPENAI as the primary search results even more now. and people think reddit has been increasing in genuine users, do they not see the amount of AI and bots there. ive been seing alot of indian related subs lately to.

  • abbadon420@sh.itjust.works
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    1 day ago

    That’s why LLM’s are taking over that role as “entry point”. It’s not that they don’t suck, but offer a satisfactory answer faster than Google does.

  • als@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    22 hours ago

    I have replaced most my search engine usage with Wikipedia and I’m much happier with the results

    • Frezik@lemmy.blahaj.zoneOP
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      1 day ago

      Think about practical skills, though. Anything from repairing downspouts to rebuilding a bike wheel. You can do it, but it’s becoming notably harder to find good information on these things, especially when you have some specific situations that complicate things.

      • SchmidtGenetics@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        Booleans. Change the year to 2020, or remove certain sites/results.

        All the data is still there, just gotta know how to find it, kinda like an old school library at this point! If you’re going through the process of self learning and/or bettering yourself instead of just watching and repeating, you’ll know how to wade through crap already. And if you want the latter, well googles crapification isn’t a concern to you.

          • SchmidtGenetics@lemmy.world
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            18 hours ago

            There is plenty of different Booleans for those situations, but there’s not many new inventions in the last 5 years.

            • Frezik@lemmy.blahaj.zoneOP
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              17 hours ago

              There is in bikes.

              I didn’t really want to get into details of the particular thing that prompted this post, because then there’s going to be too many people posting suggestions they think are helpful, and that would be missing the point. Suffice it to say that I’m cobbling together pieces from YouTube, forum posts, and old Reddit threads that, IMO, I would expect to see more consolidated. In times past, I think it would be. I do think I’ll get there in the end, but it feels much harder to get everything together than it used to be.

              • SchmidtGenetics@lemmy.world
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                17 hours ago

                Other than more brands and types of e-bikes? Most have existed for quite a while, just not at a consumer level.

                And e-bikes are just circuits, or otherwise proprietary components. You’re gonna be following manufacturer guides, or likely videos, so use site results to specify.

              • plantfanatic@sh.itjust.works
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                3 hours ago

                restaurant manager -manager

                That shouldn’t turn up no results. That poster is assuming A LOT. It also looked like a blog post and is 30% ads, what kind of source is that? The link provided by Schmidt shows that most Booleans do work on Google and is newer than your posted link as well, as well as provided by one of their engineers… so they should be taken as more knowledgeable then… a blog post to from a random person.

                Because the search will turn up results that aren’t related to managers, there will absolutely be results. The only people who would assume there would be no results are people who think search engines only return proper results, and incorrectly assume Boolean are true AND, OR and NOT. When they have never been.

                The issue in case you haven’t figured it out, is assuming how stuff should work and being ignorant instead of learning.

                Most Booleans work on Google and have existed for decades, claiming they “don’t” or “don’t work” just means you don’t understand what the point of them has always been.

              • SchmidtGenetics@lemmy.world
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                21 hours ago

                Who claimed they were? They are tools to help, they have never included all Booleans and they’ve changed over time, my link from a Google engineer even specifies that. They have never meant to be restrictive like AND, OR and NOT, where do you get this idea from?Your website is cancer FYI.

                Use :before, and you’ll get no results past that time.

                • Koarnine@pawb.social
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                  6 hours ago

                  Lemmy.world users being the most toxic pricks while calling other sites ‘cancer’ - name a more likely duo.

      • Hazor@lemmy.world
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        21 hours ago

        For practical stuff like that, I find directly searching on YouTube to be the most useful. The wealth of free practical instruction available on YouTube is staggering. Unfortunately, that doesn’t help for those who want the information in written form, and a not insignificant proportion of it is by amateurs who have no idea what they’re doing nor know what the word “safety” means.

        • Frezik@lemmy.blahaj.zoneOP
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          18 hours ago

          I’ve found YouTube search results to be even worse. The DIY videos I need are buried beneath product reviews for adjacent things and completely unrelated topics that happened to hit certain keywords.

          • bluemoon@piefed.social
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            4 hours ago

            i can literally type in a video title and a channel name and not get it. ditto for most searchengines looking at the youtube title.

            would YaCy help? i keep thinking it’s a floss peer to peer search engine. kinda like curating a fediverse instance? lmk if it’s a good fit for solving this

            https://yacy.net/