Just to be sure, you know search isn't going away right? Its now integrated in. I'm not sure an external search is currently needed.
^ this
I've been using SearchYC to archive my comments via the RSS feed. Can I do this some other way?
This will give your 10 most recent comments: http://api.thriftdb.com/api.hnsearch.com/items/_search?filte...
Documentation here to tweak for your needs: http://www.hnsearch.com/api
EDIT: Added filter to return only comments; previously included submissions, too.
I used SearchYC as my "google for startups" I honestly cannot reiterate how useful your service was. I wish you'd keep it going as I still use it over the Hacker News Search (habit, more features, search within search results, being able to search for specific comments from users, etc etc.)
A friend was having relationship problems in part due to his startup, and I explicitly remember him saying "I looked on SearchYC and found tons of other posts from founders in the same boat" (this was when you had the curated post categories)
Seriously, thanks. (my startup is kind of in crunch at the moment but I had been meaning to reach out to you guys when I saw your service went offline a few weeks ago, i couldn't let you guys go without me - and probably the majority of the community - giving you guys some thanks and credit)
Of course, I trust YC to have their own backups as well.
I believe there are quite a few of us here at Hacker News that could claim you, Mike and Jerry, as our giants.
Respect.
I wish you the very best - I am almost expecting something even more kickass out of you guys soon.
http://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=2704753
But although I wish you would continue to include SearchYC in your future work, I wish you all the best in whatever you put your time and efforts towards.
Thank you for all your work on it.
if you want a maintainer, I am willing to takeover from where you are leaving
Seriously though, all the best, and thanks for all the years of good service!
You will be able to search for 'geeky news' also on other services than hackernews.
Thanks.