(and it's written in perl of all things)
ps. bonus points for deleting eHow from results
But then a year passed, then another, and traffic was up, and then it was up some more, and it seemed like he would never give up... at some point it stopped looking quixotic, and started to be a joy to watch. Will love to see what the future will bring.
Whilst the growth is fun to watch, it's still only 37 direct queries a second, which is nothing.
Also, I know it's been mentioned a million times before, but the name is an artificial ceiling to growth. A large % of people have no clue what duck duck goose is. A large % of people see the name as amateur, childish and stupid.
I didnt make a dime, but I did get calls from spooky people out of the blue who wouldnt identify themselves asking questions.
I admire anyone who pursues this goal, and yet I will never go there again.
I've been getting the DDG newsletters since day 1, but I can't seem to fully adapt to duck duck go. I guess I just am addicted to using google.
=EDIT= For those commenting that they aren't familiar with the name, its interesting that you still understand its a search engine. Thus for you, understanding the context of the name is irrelevant. But for those not familiar with search engines, but do know duck duck goose, I think its pretty logical to explain 'duck duck go' as a search engine.
I also like the red...not because I think it's beautiful (it's not imo but that's subjective) but because it's very distinct and associateable with search
Looks like that was in early 2011, before Panda came and nearly wiped eHow out, and over a year before I started. After that, they made a concerted effort to fix their algorithms and focus on providing good, non-automated content. Are they still considered a content farm to be avoided these days?
http://slashcode.git.sourceforge.net/git/gitweb.cgi?p=slashc...
Due to our continuing growth we are in search of Perl Developers for our headquarters in Amsterdam, the Netherlands. We use Perl, Apache, mod_perl, MySQL, Memcache, JavaScript, Git, Linux & more. We do agile software development based on scrum.
[1] These are purely hypothetical. I'm a big fan of both Gabriel and DDG, and I'm not suggesting he would ever do these.
Fortunately any regulatory regime would be an absolute nightmare so I am not worried about search neutrality ever being a big thing. How do you distinguish between relevant search results and a lack of search neutrality?
Second, I am not sure about their future. It looks like its a temporary spark after all the omg-goverment-tracks-my-searches paranoia.
The fact is, if the large organisations such as Google or Microsoft could not admit on the record to participation in PRISM, what makes you think Duck will? Further, if PRISM is real and if large organisations such as Google or Microsoft could not say "no", what makes you think Duck will have an option for a different fate? Lastly, if there is no trucking by gov of your searches, then there is not much different in using Google versus Duck for someone who has been using Google for years and just temporarily switched to Duck.
It does point to https://encrypted.google.com, which is slightly better, but not much...
http://security.stackexchange.com/questions/32367/what-is-th...
If you want to use Google privately, use Start Page (http://startpage.com) or Ixquick (http://ixquick.com).
Google search, no privacy disclosure.
That's my first fallback if straight DDG doesn't work. I'm falling back less often (about one month of solid DDG use now).
I've been using DuckDuckGo as my primary search engine ever since the NSA fallout came, and the results are surprisingly usable for most common tasks. In some cases they feel better than Google because I'm seeing some useful sites that Google doesn't ordinarily show.
The only area where DuckDuckGo searches have been lacking for me is in finding useful technical articles and code results. Sometimes when I have to search for a complicated error message or research some programming problem to see how other people have approached it DDG will not work for me and I have to resort to Google or directly search Stackoverflow or something.
But it's already usable for the average person IMO.
I've encountered this problem on obscure code searches though.
Also hate the name, but I guess silliness is hip.
Still waiting for something that brings the best of both worlds.
The whole idea of there being just one useful search engine doesn't make sense to me. I only wish these companies would do more to differentiate themselves and that there were more options.
so ohgodhelpme will search stackoverflow for ohgodhelpme
g will search duckduckgo
go will search google.
I have noticed that as well, I gradually migrated from typing in "g whatever" to "go whatever"
Kind of depressing actually. Because I do like DDG.
https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/how-search-from-address...
If you bookmark any website's search results page, you can add a keyword and edit the bookmarked URL to include a printf-style %s placeholder. When you enter the keyword plus some string, Firefox opens the bookmarked URL, substituting your string for %s.
For example, I have a "w" keyword search for Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/index.php?search=%s and a "yt" keyword search for YouTube https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=%s&search=Searc...
http://help.dukgo.com/customer/portal/articles/216399-source...
I switched to DDG about a week before the whole NSA thing. At first it was awkward, queries are slower than google (sometimes the results are worse), but after a while I stopped noticing it.
I don't mind waiting a second more if it means not being tracked, and most of the time my queries are simple and the results are on par with other search engines.
*edit changed <<worst>> to <<worse>> the results aren't that bad...
Edit: For a good example of its biases, search "hacker news" on ddg, bing, then google.
http://news.netcraft.com/archives/2013/06/25/ssl-intercepted...
For example when I search 'Egypt' on Google all of the search results (except for Wikipedia) are on the competing political factions, something I've read extensively out of interest. The same search on DuckDuckGo results in a mix of travel, encyclopaedia, a dictionary.com definition of the word Egypt, linkbait, and a couple of relevant news articles.
The trade-off here is I would have to start being much more specific with my search queries to get what I want out of DDG, and often times I can't put into words what I want so being specific is not an option, Google knows what I want to see.
It will be interesting to see how long this lasts after the next big media fad comes and everyone forgets about the NSA.
I still find their results better than DDG's, unfortunately, and reverted my default search from DDG to Google after I found I was prefixing almost every search with !g.
But unlike you, I rarely search for anything as general as "Egypt". I wouldn't even think to. For general info about a whole country I would go to Wikipedia or Wikivoyage or similar instead. I hit Google when searching for something more specific, like info on a particular protest in Egypt, or monad libraries for JavaScript.
Google has become my gateway into current events. I don't read news or blog sites often so I'm not sure of what's going on, by querying a general topic I am instantly presented with a multitude of topics from a variety of sources that I can then follow up on with specific results.
Google's cookies and data about me help it select subtopics I'd be interested in. I.e. I don't care that Kuwait has offered Egypt an aid package (found on DDG) but I do care about the new protests.
Here's how today's switch went:
1. Install DDG chrome extension
2. Set DDG as default search provider
3. Search "duck duck go bang feature" (for a refresher)
4. What I wanted (https://duckduckgo.com/bang.html) was nowhere in the search results
5. Switch default search provider back to GOOG
6. Search "duck duck go bang feature"
7. #1 result: https://duckduckgo.com/bang.html
Alas, I wish it weren't so...
https://duckduckgo.com/?q=duckduckgo+bang+feature
You can consider that a shortcoming given how specific the query was. However, once you realize its behavior it isn't that difficult to find what you want– in some cases, it's actually very helpful.
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Edit: UK gives the proper result. Canada as well.
I'd love the search market to be split into 3-4 entities with similiar market share - not one getting 80-90% of the cake. Google extracts way too much value out of web traffic, killing the small business - and this phenomenon increases quarter by quarter in its intensity.
The "28 days" in the title is a little misleading. It's just the smoothing applied to the graph, not the total time period.
Remember to change your default search engine:
http://help.dukgo.com/customer/portal/articles/216440-chrome
http://help.dukgo.com/customer/portal/articles/216441-firefo...
Let's make protecting privacy a good business decision.
It's catching on :)
A critical feature I would like to see are real-time search results that Google added a few years ago. Autocomplete suggestions are also critical.
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/w/api.php?action=opensearch&search=...
15 hours ago.
The only real reason I haven't switched is that I'm VERY wired into the Google ecosystem. I use Google Apps heavily and have a Nexus phone. Search results on DDG aren't always great but that was never really a problem for me.
Data point: unlike some, I love the name and branding.
Either the results have improved since then, or I'm more conscious about my provacy and thus avoiding using and depending on Google products all over the line.
The last 2 months I've completely dropped at least 4 Google products, and I can see the list getting longer.
Thanks to the DDG-team for being one of the actors out there who respect my privacy!
I'm very glad that Gabriel was brave enough to start a new search engine and stuck to the project, which really paid off. We have a viable, non-tracking alternative to Google now.
It was a lot more impressive when I actually looked at the graph.