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Hi, I like to learn about what resources are out there on the internet. I hope you have found my posts useful!
Thanks! That’s a good idea!

I’d highly recommend using ZIM to download the websites you want! (wiki.openzim.org/wiki/Build_your_ZIM_file)

Once downloaded, you honestly can probably get better results from basic notepad search than google/duckduckgo/bing.

Build your ZIM file - openZIM

Super useful plugin! You can also subscribe to lists that block SEO/AI generated websites. Now only if there was a whitelist plugin that places forums higher up
Someday this will be possible when an open source search engine comes around.
I noticed some of the best resources from the past are unfindable from any search engine. For example some science youtube channels which offer amazing quality content seem to be unfindable. They are replaced with other channels that try to clickbait their way to the top. The same can be said with websites that SEO as much as they can. The highest quality resources are also often in the least quantity. A form of quantity > quality is favored and amplified and sometimes even censored. (Anna’s archive)

It’s quite sad that we are now at a point where we are forced to make our own search engines from scratch. Search engines are hard! Google’s original search algorithm (about 2 decades ago) was quite amazing. You were able to give vague search terms and yet still find the answer you wanted. The secret sauce was ranking based on relevance to the search query. I’m not aware of any guides/projects on search engines. I wish there was a good way I could search for this. (The irony!) But a great starting resource is this series on networks from wikipedia. (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Network_theory)

Some random tips:

  • The main goal of any search engine should be to minimize the number of times a user returns to the ranking page to click on a new link. Big tech should be doing this anyways but they have other goals.
  • The main metadata database needs to topologically connect you to any part of the internet. (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graph_theory) Think of it as a hub/portal giving you general directions, but doesn’t tell you exactly where you should be heading. The ideal solution is to download everything from the internet and query each result for relevance to a search query individually, but this is intractable. Instead you have to group the internet into graphs and sub graphs - STEM, Social, Forums, E-commerce etc. Hyperlinks offer an objective way to calculate connections between websites. For example Lemmy.world <-> Wikipedia.org. The weight of these connections gives you a way to guide a traversal algorithm during search. Semantic analysis of some form allows you to find more efficient ways to draw connections making your search more efficient.
  • The most powerful way to find connection/relevance to a search term is with transformers and their attention mechanism. For example if the search query is “Open source search engine”, the attention heatmap would be on groups of websites subjects like Forums, Q&A, Programming, Network Science, etc. There would also be a negative heatmap for topics like Cooking, Sports, Entertainment, etc. From there you want to load up recursively metadata for websites. For example for Lemmy it would be the title of all posts (and maybe their top comments). If it fits, load as much of this as you can into a transformer and calculate the heatmap relative to the search query. Again you are not using the transformer to generate answers. This is a bad idea. Instead you are using it to rank search results in terms of relevance/attention, what the transformer is fundamentally designed for.

As a side note, you are able to tune your model to your own search preferences with little data. You are also able to exchange computation time for search quality! This is amazing. If computation is a concern, traditional traversal algorithms and basic relevance/ranking algorithms work too but at the cost of more engineering.

I hope this sorta helps, if you have any other question feel free to ask! The future of search will likely be self-hosted as conflicts of interest within current search engine providers degrades the quality to the point where they are unusable.

Network theory - Wikipedia

Finding the balance between what to keep to index is hard! The attention mechanism in transformers should be pretty good at ranking results. The idea is to feed into context titles, top answers, etc in bulk along with a search query. The attention heatmap relative to the search gives you a general rank for how good each result is. Ironically enough, this is probably the most powerful indexer, yet no big tech uses it and instead has the model generate answers instead of ranking them. The best part is, this system is tunable and can be adjusted to user preference with little data. The overall goal should be to minimize the number of results a user checks. (This should be what other engines are doing in the first place)

What are some tricks to efficiently search for information on the internet?

https://lemmy.world/post/38397979

What are some tricks to efficiently search for information on the internet? - Lemmy.World

Choices have slowly been running out when it comes to effective search engines. It seems inevitable an open source search engine project independent from big tech will be needed. Some of my own tricks are: - Use the blacklist plugin to block sites from search. - Search for forum sites and communities instead of specific queries. (Wikipedia has a list of forums that might be useful) - For technical questions favor Q&A websites like stack exchange. - YouTube videos often offer better information than results from search engines. (Use search engines instead of YT search) - Look for blogs and journals that specialize in the topic you’re searching for. - Use boolean search when possible. - Self-host and customize your own metadata search engine. Create a graph network linking websites based on subject/topic. You may not be able to query specific questions but you can discover sites that you otherwise can’t in traditonal search. This is a great way to discover hidden gems! (Example: https://internet-map.net/ [https://internet-map.net/]) - (Difficult) Self-host and scrape sites across the web in order to create your own query-able database. This would be the most effective way to search the internet and would be completely independent from potential enshittification and censorship. The cost however is quite high both in term of hardware and time. Kiwix offers a way to download websites for offline use. (Ex: Wikipedia, Stack exchange). This is a good starting point to build your own custom search engine. I would love to hear the tips and tricks you use! I hope this post helps others in more efficiently finding information on the internet!

How do you get the best prices? (General Finance)

https://lemmy.world/post/25038631

How do you get the best prices? (General Finance) - Lemmy.World

Recently noticed some amazon items are 80% more expensive than ebay. Made this post for some tips and tricks on finding the best prices, deals or services for general items. Here are some off the top of my head. - Government auctions often have the best bang for your buck on some items. (Tech, tools, etc) - Retailmenot.com [http://Retailmenot.com] seems to be the only real coupon website with real coupons. I don’t know of any others. - Some mobile and internet providers will offer a discount if you try and cancel. - Insurance companies have been caught buying sensor data from your phone and using it to raise premiums if they detect stuff like sudden stops. To get the best deal, avoid their tracking and don’t opt in to their driving performance tracking program. Here are some potental topics - Bank/credit unions plans - Insurance plans - Food/Groceries - Hardware store supplies - Tools/House work - E-shopping - Couponing - Pitfalls

Glad you found it awesome! :)