13 May 2014

DuckDuckGo: A Search Engine Done Right

DuckDuckGo is my favorite search engine for so many reasons. With its new redesign, DuckDuckGo is undergoing a major visual revamp which I hope will draw more new users, because both the fundamental philosophy of DuckDuckGo and its execution are models for a perfect search engine. Google is currently the industry leader, and many have tried and failed to beat Google. DuckDuckGo is one contender, but compared to Bing and Yahoo, DuckDuckGo isn't very significant. Yet.

The problem with Google is that they use extensively-obtained user data to provide context for a user's search terms. Often times, there's more meaning to the search terms than just the words and spaces, there's something behind their use of those words and their searching for a particular thing at any given time. I've used Google off and on for quite some time and I find it to be quite helpful, but I'm not satisfied with it any more.

DuckDuckGo, on the other hand, does not (to my knowledge) use context-based recognition of users' search terms. I find that many of my searches turn out better results on DuckDuckGo than on Google, surprisingly enough. Sometimes, when I'm looking for an answer to a programming question or something like that, DuckDuckGo is a much better search engine for that kind of question. I find that this is often because the first few pages of Google's results are merely Stack Overflow questions relating to my query, and often the answers to those are of such low quality that they are not applicable to my search. DuckDuckGo, on the other hand, always gives me results from sites that are reputable in the area (e.g. W3 for HTML-related stuff).

Another feature that Google lacks that DuckDuckGo users will find incredibly useful is the ability to use other search engines. DuckDuckGo includes a library of so-called "bangs," which are basically words or abbreviations that start with exclamation marks and do various things to the search. For example, the "!gi" bang will forward the search to Google Images, if you prefer to use that. Or, if you're looking for a Wikipedia article, "!w" is available. If you're looking for JSTOR documents, there's "!jstor". If you're looking for documentation, even "!ruby" or "!js" are out there. Bangs redefine searching: the user probably knows what they want to find, and the user is usually right.

So I would highly suggest DuckDuckGo. If you don't already have it set as default in your browser, you can click buttons on their new homepage or you can follow their helpful instructions. Give it a spin. Let me know what you think.

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