this post was submitted on 01 Mar 2026
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I'm trying to degoogle. I've heard good things about DuckDuckGo and I've been using it for the past few weeks and it's pretty solid. But I'm just wondering what the Lemmy/Piefed community prefer for a search engine.

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[–] Reverendender@sh.itjust.works 31 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (2 children)

Kagi. I know it gets trash talked for several reasons, but I've used ecosia, duckduckgo, tried searxng, and now I’m back to Kagi. I just like it better all around.

[–] theherk@lemmy.world 15 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Been a Kagi user for about 6 months now. Not one negative thing to say. So refreshing to have good results again.

[–] matsdis@piefed.social 10 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

Kagi user since 2022, according to my account. I'll admit that I rarely ever cross-check with other search engines. I like their assistants too (they are basically re-selling access to all big LLMs in their Ultimate tier). But you don't really need those, what keeps me there are the good search results. (And the ability to easily block/raise whole domains on the results.)

[–] one_old_coder@piefed.social 3 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (2 children)

It feels like spam to mention Kagi since it's all over the place (even on Hacker News), but I've been a subscriber since the beginning and it made me a "2x programmer" due to their good results.

If I had no money left, I would try SearXNG.

I tired it. I'm not unintelligent, and it was far too complex of a setup for me. I did not care for it. But that's just me.

[–] Casterial@lemmy.world -3 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (1 children)

For programming questions why not use an LLM? The days of searching a specific problem are long done. LLM+Documentation is all you really need now days.

[–] one_old_coder@piefed.social 2 points 23 hours ago (1 children)

I learn a lot while I search. LLMs may or may not hallucinate, and I'm not learning.

[–] Casterial@lemmy.world 1 points 7 hours ago* (last edited 7 hours ago)

Depends how you use LLMs. I didn't say use LLM to solve the problem, I have it breakdown the documentation and make it easier to read/provide examples of usage + explain the steps.

Stackoverflow also has incorrect answers always marked as correct and isn't a great source to learn from, the best way to learn is just reading documentation and having breakpoints to read the data coming in.

I had to make a stackoverflow back in the day to correct so many incorrect answers.