What about duck duck go
What about duck duck go
I do not see any issues with youtube, although I do not watch there everyday.
I always go with bing, not the favorite most folks go to like google but still reliable and relevent
Yes Frankthetanlk1 how do you do that?have you thought about creating a homepage located on your harddrive? like a intranet homepage?
Do you have any how to links?
Google search results are different on different computers. Google seeks to provide the best results for individual users. This means that they want and expect search results to be different from person to person and that people searching in the same office may see different search results.
Yahoo! Search
Wolfram Alpha
Ask.com
Not only
but also depending on your preferred browser, your IP even language because it provides data-specific search results.
It depends on what you are looking for. Exists a lot of search engines apart from all-known Google, Yahoo!, Ask and Bing.
General:
http://goofram.com/ — Goofram
http://www.wikipedia.org — Wikipedia and sister projects.
http://www.thesearchenginelist.com/ — The Search Engine List. Comprehensive list of Search Engines
https://weboas.is/ — Multipurpose search portal with lot of search engines
http://www.us.wow.com — WOW.com Search Engine. Part of the AOL Search Network — Top Videos, Articles & Trending Topics
https://www.quora.com/ — search engine with the personal touch
http://www.informationvine.com/ — Information Vine
Also:
https://www.zapmeta.ws/
http://www.wholefinds.com/
https://www.downduck.com/
https://duckduckgo.com/ — DuckDuckGo
https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/fir...qrobeit-https/ — Qrobe.it = Google + Bing + TAM. Searches Google, Bing and TAM simultaneously. TAM instant answers, infinite scrolling, private, secure, SSL "query /yt", "query /gm", "query /nf" searches YouTube, Google maps, Netflix etc respectively
http://search.creativecommons.org/ — a search aggregator offering access to search results provided by a number of independent organizations
https://lmgtfy.com/ — a search aggregator for Google, Yahoo!, Bing and Ask with shortening link which can be shared
https://www.dogpile.com/ — sends a search to a customizable list of search engines, directories and specialty search sites, then displays results from each search engine individually
https://gibiru.com/ — uncensored anonymous search
http://vivisimo.com/ — automatically organize the pages into categories
https://www.qwant.com/ — another privacy-oriented search engine that is based in France
https://swisscows.com/ — Extremely privacy-focused, parent-control oriented search with helpful suggestion tags. It's built-in filter for pornographic and violent content cannot be overridden
https://www.searchencrypt.com/ — a meta search engine that puts privacy at its forefront combining AES-256 encryption with Secure Sockets Layer encryption. Offers auto-delete feature for browsing history. It gives it better privacy by default than
https://duckduckgo.com/ — uncensored anonymous search DuckDuckGo
http://www.lukol.com/ — uses a proxy server to deliver customized search results from Google using its enhanced custom search yet conserves your privacy by removing traceable entities. Lukol is considered as one of the best private search engines that protects from online fraudsters and keeps the spammers away by safeguarding you from misleading or inappropriate sites. It ensures full anonymity of your searches
https://searx.me/ — doesn’t gather your data and offers unbiased results from several sources. SearX is an open source Google alternative and available to everyone for a source code review as well as contributions on GitHub. You can even customize it as your own meta search engine and host it on your server.
https://yippy.com/ — Formerly known as Clusty, Yippy is a meta search engine that brings out the power of many conventional search engines to give a collective result. It has an additional feature that automatically categorizes query results. If you want to explore the deep web, Yippy is your tool
http://addictomatic.com/ — results from a huge number of channels in that one page (including Google, Bing News, Twitter, YouTube, Flickr)
https://www.bitclave.com/ — a decentralized search engine built with block chain to protect user privacy
http://www.langreiter.com/exec/yahoo-vs-google.html — See visually how results compare on Google versus Yahoo
http://www.bjorgul.com/ — Clean interface lets you query major services from one page
http://www.thrall.org/proteus.html — Lets you easily send your search to one of several search engines. It also has links to search engine help pages
http://www.queryster.com — lets you quickly get results from one of several major search engines, simply by clicking an icon
http://www.yurnet.com — Select your search engines from the many choices offered. The results will all appear within one page, side-by-side. It’s a great way to compare results, though a bit hard to read with more than two search engines selected
https://www.metacrawler.com/ — was originally a meta search engine, as its name suggests. Throughout its lifetime it combined web search results from sources including Google, Yahoo!, Bing (formerly Live Search), Ask.com, About.com, MIVA, LookSmart and other search engine programs. MetaCrawler also provided users the option to search for images, video, news, business and personal telephone directories, and for a while even audio
https://www.oscobo.com/ — fully encrypts your search terms so no one can intercept or decrypt your search terms
https://www.discretesearch.com/ — a meta search engine that doesn’t track any identifiable information
anonymity. Available for Chrome, Firefox, Safari, Opera, Android and iOS
https://metager.org/ — this private search engine integrates with a proxy server that hides your IP address
http://easss.com/search/metasearch.htm — a meta search aggregator
https://www.yase.pw/ — offers a clean and intuitive interface, user-friendly privacy policy, and smart answer system including separate web, images, videos, and news results, and allows users to set filters including Safe Search and file type. Claims that doesn’t “share any personally identifying information publicly or with third-parties, except when required to by law”
http://www.dogpile.com/ — results from various different engines including Google, Yandex and Yahoo, but removes all the ads
http://technorati.com/ — uses tags that authors have included on their websites. These tags categorize search results, with the most recent ones appearing at the top
https://www.gigablast.com/ — a free and open-source web search engine and directory by Matt Wells
https://www.mojeek.com/ — Independent, alternative, and unbiased search results with no user tracking (based in the UK)
https://www.ecosia.org/
http://www.mamma.com/ — one of the oldest meta search engines on the web
http://www.surfwax.com/ — Using the “SiteSnaps” feature, you can preview any page in the results and see where your terms appear in the document. Allows results or documents to be saved for future use
http://web.curryguide.com/ — Meta search engine for the US and several European countries, as well as in various subject areas. Has ability to save your results for easy rerunning at a future point
http://www.excite.com/ — Formerly a crawled-based search engine, Excite was acquired by InfoSpace in 2002 and uses the same underlying technology as the other InfoSpace meta search engines, but maintains its own portal features
http://www.fazzle.com/ — offers a highly flexible and customizable interface to a wide variety of information sources, ranging from general web results to specialized search resources in a number of subject specific categories. Formerly called SearchOnline
http://gimenei.com/ — queries an undisclosed number of search engines and removes duplicates from results. Its most useful feature is an advanced search form that allows you to limit your search to a specific country
http://www.icerocket.com/ — Meta search engine with thumbnail displays. The Quick View display, similar to what WiseNut has long offered, is cool. The service queries WiseNut, Yahoo, Teoma and then somewhat repetitively also includes Yahoo-powered MSN, AltaVista and AllTheWeb. Disclosure of search sources within the actual search results is not done, sadly. Makes it hard to know exactly where the results are coming from
http://www.info.com — provides results from 14 search engines and pay-per-click directories, including Google, Ask Jeeves, Yahoo, Kanoodle, LookSmart, About, Overture and Open Directory. Also offers shopping, news, eBay, audio and video search, as well as a number of other interesting features
http://www.infogrid.com — provides direct links to major search sites and topical web sites in different categories. Meta search and news searching is also offered
http://www.infonetware.com — primarily designed to demonstrate classification technology from Infogistics. It’s a meta search engine, and it does topical classification of results, like Vivisimo. However, it is unique in that you can select several different topics, then “drill down” to see results from all of them, rather than being restricted to the results from only one topic.
http://www.ithaki.net/ — probably the most “global” of all meta search engines, available in 14 languages and offering more than 35 different categories for limiting your search. In addition, Ithaki offers country specific search, querying only local search engines rather than the regional versions of the major search engines
http://www.izito.com — a meta search engine with a clever feature. Click on any listing you are interested in using the P icon next to the listing title. That “parks” the listing into your to do list. Click on the P tab, and you can see all the pages you’ve culled. It’s an easy, handy way to make a custom result set. Also interesting is the ability to show listings in up to three columns across the screen, letting you see more results at once
http://www.jux2.com/ — allows you to search two major search engines at the same time, then see results that are found on both first, followed by results found on only one of them next. The small overlap visual tool displayed is great. I used to make examples like this to explain search engine overlap and why one search engine may not cover everything. Now I have an easy dynamic way to do this. The stats link at the bottom of the home page provides more visuals
http://www.meceoo.com/ — Meta search with the ability to create an “exclusion list” to block pages from particular web sites being included. For example, want to meta search only against .org sites? French version also offered
http://www.metaeureka.com — Search against several major search engines and paid listings services. Offers a nice option to see Alexa info about pages that are listed.
http://www.profusion.com — Brings back listings from several major search engines as well as “Invisible Web” resources
http://www.queryserver.com/web.htm — Search against major web-wide search engines, as well as major news, health, money and government search services
http://turbo10.com — a meta search engine accesses both traditional web search engines and some invisible web databases, with a very speedy interface
http://www.search.com — a meta search engine operated by CNET. It offers both web-wide search and a wide variety of specialty search options. Search.com absorbed SavvySearch in October 1999. SavvySearch was one of the older meta search services, around since May 1995 and formerly based at Colorado State University.
http://www.ujiko.com/ — From the makers of visual meta search tool KartOO, this is a really slick service to try. Do your search, then scroll through the list. See something bad? Click the trash can icon, and the listing goes away. It’s a great way to prune your results — even better would have been if everything trashed brought up something new to look at. That would be a help for those who simply refuse to go past the first page of results. See something you like? Click the heart icon and you can rate the listing. This information is memorized, to help ensure the sites you choose to better in future searches. Unlike KartOO, Ujiko uses results from only one search engine: Yahoo. It also offers many more features I haven’t even yet explored
http://www.webcrawler.com — Formerly a crawled-based search engine owned by Excite, Webcrawler was acquired by InfoSpace in 2002 and uses the same underlying technology as the other InfoSpace meta search engines, but offers a fast and clean, ad-free interface
https://www.hotbot.com/ — a privately owned web search engine and a privacy blog
https://www.exalead.com/search/ — public Web search engine, which was designed to apply semantic processing and faceted navigation to Web data volumes and usage. Exalead also operates an online laboratory which uses the Web as a medium for developing applied technologies for business
https://www.lycos.com/ — a web search engine and web portal established in 1994, spun out of Carnegie Mellon University
https://blekko.com/
http://www.chacha.com/ — a lot more like Ask where users can ask any particular question
https://vimeo.com/
https://disconnect.me/ — more of a browser extension which you need to add. Let’s you use your favorite search engine with
https://www.yandex.com/ — a Russian-founded search engine*
https://www.baidu.com/ — aka “China’s Google”, Baidu is the largest search engine in China that facilitates web searching in Chinese language as well as in Japanese*
https://archive.org/ — taking snapshots of the whole World Wide Web for years now. This allows you to travel back in time
* Might be dangerous because of not only tracking but also (that is much the worse!) attempt to set up spy soft on your computer
Forums and boards Search:
http://boardreader.com/ — a simple way to search forums and boards
http://buzzsumo.com/ — identifies the most shared links on social networks
http://www.crunchbase.com/ — offers information about people and startups
http://socialmention.com/ — a social media search engine that searches user-generated content such as blogs, comments, bookmarks, events, news so on
http://topsy.com/ — Social media analytics
http://www.slideshare.net/ — a really handy place to source information from presentations, slide decks, webinars and whatever else
https://www.listennotes.com/ — “the best podcast search engine”
Specialty Choices:
The metacrawlers listed below let you meta search in specific subject areas.
http://www.familyfriendlysearch.com — Meta search service that queries major kid-friendly search engines
http://www.gofish.com — Meta search service for licensed and commercially available digital media downloads including music, movies, music videos, ringtones, mobile games and PC games, searching over 12 million media files.
http://www.searchy.co.uk — Searches 15 U.K. engines. The advanced search form allows you to change the order that results are presented, either by speed or manually to suit your own preferences.
http://www.apple.com/downloads/macos...es/watson.html — Watson for the Macintosh is a “Swiss Army Knife” with nineteen (!) interfaces to web content and services — an improvement on Sherlock, with nearly twice as many tools, including Google Searching
Image Search Engines:
http://fr.search.yahoo.com/search/fr/img/index.html — The Yahoo images search engine
https://www.flickr.com/ — Flickr
http://picgine.com/ — Picgine — Finding photos
http://www.kartoo.com/ — visual search engine
https://www.gettyimages.com/search/search-by-image
https://www.istockphoto.com/ — Search by image
https://www.shutterstock.com/ — Search by image
http://www.wesee.com/
http://www.tineye.com/ — Photo Search Engine
http://www.imagezfinder.com/
https://giphy.com/ — search engine for gifs
Book Search Engines:
http://books.google.com/ — Google Book Search
http://books.google.com/books?as_isbn=5762503801 — Google Book Search, including text search
http://froogle.google.com/froogle?q=...ed=1&scoring=p — Find this book (5762503801) in Internet stores via Google Product Search — https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Google_Product_Search
http://webcatplus.nii.ac.jp/ — Webcat Plus: Search for books, magazines, etc
http://libgen.io/ — Library Genesis2M
http://libgen.pw/ — the same
Tor Search Engines:
https://startpage.com/ — The world's most private search engine. Gathers results from many search engines
https://3g2upl4pq6kufc4m.onion/ — DuckDuckGo Onion
http://gjobqjj7wyczbqie.onion/ — Candle search
http://msydqstlz2kzerdg.onion/ — Ahmia.fi — Clearnet search engine for Tor Hidden Services.
www.onionsearchengine.com/ [http://5u56fjmxu63xcmbk.onion/] — Onion search engine for deep web links
info.dogpile.com/ — Internet Darknet — Search on Dogpile.com
http://scihub22266oqcxt.onion/ — SCI-HUB — seems to be bloked
http://mx7rwxcountermqh.onion/ — Here is Bibliomaniac's annotated list of links to onions that serve books
http://rrcc5uuudhh4oz3c.onion/?cmd=topic&id=15006 — List of ebook sites
http://rrcc5uuudhh4oz3c.onion/?cmd=topic&id=10848 — Ebook links etc.
http://hackcanl2o4lvmnv.onion/blackcrawl/magick.html — Magick Files Index
http://xsold3pvbxt4xblv.onion/ — LiberTORian 2.0 is a retro eZine covering issues regarding individual liberty
Files Search Engines:
https://pastebin.com/
http://www.generalfil.es/ — General Files for everyone
https://hunter.io/ — Everything you need to know to find email addresses in seconds like no one else
http://www.searchftps.org/ — Napalm FTP Indexer
https://www.filesloop.com/ — file search aggregator for file hosts and torrents
http://informatieplatform.nl/filesha...-torrentsites/
https://idope.se/link.html
http://www.aiosearch.com/
https://nanrenbt.cc/ — Torrent Search
https://torrents.me/search/
https://torrentz2.eu — replace https://torrentz.com/. It works!
http://metasearch.torrentproject.com/ — Torrent Meta Searchhttp://torrentproject.com
https://snowfl.com/ — a torrent aggregator, it searches various public torrent indexes in real time
http://snowflcblpoz4feg.onion/
https://zbigz.com/ — The easiest and secure way to download torrents
http://sweetorrents.com/ — SweeTorrents — search engine for searches and download torrents
http://www.ju8.me/ — a DHT resource search engine based on the Torrents protocol
http://www.btsay.org/ — Magnet Links & Torrents
http://www.tangent60.com/ — Take a look on torrents under the different angle!
http://www.searchonzippy.com/ — Search on Zippyshare.com — username and password are being requested
https://zippysharesearch.info/ — Search on Zippyshare.com
http://www.filewatcher.com/
https://nzbindex.nl
https://www.usenet-crawler.com/
See also:
https://web.archive.org/web/20080712...l?page=2156581
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catego...search_engines
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_search_engines
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compar...search_engines
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Search_engine_privacy
Scroogle is sorely missed Right now I'm using, in order of preference...
https://duckduckgo.com/
https://eu.startpage.com/
https://search.privacytools.io/ (a Searx instance)
https://www.qwant.com/
I frequented Qrobe in the past, but stopped because they added Google redirects to their results and were misleading with their privacy policy (they don't track, but do keep logs).
Yandex may be owned byPutinRussians, but their reverse image search is amazingly good and has no captchas
"I just remembered something that happened a long time ago."
Try Bing, be part of a much smaller database.
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