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by dontbenebby 1485 days ago
>I've found search operators and quotes are less and less effective — especially on Google

On Google, I treat my search terms like a Venn diagram if I want good results.

Eg: want an article about the texas blackouts, but not the ones a decade ago?

Type "texas blackout npr 2022" minus quotes.

But if you do that on other engines, it may be MUCH more literal, the literal intersection of those terms, and I need to do the opposite: use as few terms as possible, possibly paired with using the site: operator, intitle operator, or other things.

>It's made it harder to search for bits of poetry, quotations, or song lyrics, especially.

Yeah to be completely clear, my default is DuckDuckGo, then very rarely I fall back to Google, but often if I'm doing that it's because I didn't want to trouble a librarian -- they talk about privacy, but I had a series of unfortunate events when I told one I want to use books as much as possible because I absolutely don't want some of these tech bros to know what I'm looking up.

(That dichotomy of folks who know information science and those who have critical thinking or coding skills needs to end, now. I'm an alumni of one of the highest ranked schools of information science in the world, and I will not be figuratively or literally extorted into a PhD to get roles others get with a bachelors.)

1 comments

I had the same idea but the "2022" seems to be the bit which gets nearly always ignored (in my subjective opinion)