If someone is interested in AI search, then there is Perplexica which is a self-hosted open source AI powered search engine. It uses your local LLMs instead of OpenAI servers.
Best reply here, instead of shitting on AI, something usefull! Will try it, thank you!
Now I’ll finally know how many rocks to eat each day, even if I still won’t know how many Rs are in “strawberry.”
Just for the sake of it I asked Gemini advanced how many g are in highlighting:
https://i.imgur.com/SXYikKC.png
AI will replace us all, they said…
next up on our show “shit people never asked for” …
“We have perfectly good search already…” “But it’s AI!” “I’ll buy your entire stock!”
I guess we’ll see how it goes here with the hallucinations
The best part of this is that every search you run has the same environmental impact as clearcutting the Amazon
This may be the worst side effect. Trading efficiency AND accuracy for flexibility.
What are benefits of using openai search when we already have Kagi that is much more privacy a friendly, is ads free and provides the same functionality?
I’m intrigued by Kagi and maybe I’ll try it. I like the business model of subscription instead of being the product. I don’t mind paying for my privacy. It’s not FOSS though, so we may never know if they’re not reselling our data.
they got very defensive about disclosing their search sources ever since the Brave thing, lol https://kagifeedback.org/d/5185-more-detailed-information-about-search-sources
My question was about benefits of openai search compared to kagi search. How is this link related to my question?
The linked post goes into detail about why the author views Kagi as not privacy oriented, and that in the author’s opinion Kagi is overly focused on AI. (And was originally started as an AI company)
And that is very strange for me. Under the news about AI-search from OpenAI I asked about comparison with AI-search from Kagi, but got a lot of downvotes and a link to the post where the author express his negative opinion about AI.
It’s wild that they are not breaking even with these prices. I’ve had an annual subscription since January and made nearly 5000 searches. Extrapolating to a year, I will have been paying about $0.17 per search. If that would go to the electricity bill then it corresponds to about 1 kWh of energy, enough to run a 50-watt laptop PC for 20 hours.
The correct answer to “how to plan a road trip on the Amalfi coast” is
“Don’t”