They do have their own index which is used to detect how many ads the website has etc and for small web / blog searches, but they use meta results to have more results.
Also, they do have integration with multiple LLMs - ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, Mistral and their own
They sort of do that.
Next to link, you have information about how many ads were detected in the site, and sites with more ads are lower ranked. They also have an index of their own which only allows sites with few ad detections (they use number of blocked things by ublock, so it also counts tracking links etc)
At least 62% of visitors on my PWA come from Play Store, with 20% being labeled "unknown".
It really depends on your app, but many mobile users just search for stuff in Play Store first before searching on Google, and even Googling it will help as you will get a widget about your app (sometimes). The web version is (for the most popular queries) on average 1.6th in Google results.
Although the dataset may not be very large (10k+ installs shown on Play Store page).
That means that multiple arbitration cases cannot be joined together - which is actually worse for them, as they have to pay a fee per case, so more cases means more fees to be paid.
It'a weird that this isn't normal.
I bought an "AlzaPower" cable, which is just a rebrand of some chinese manufacturer by a local reseller ("czech amazon"), and they have their wattage as well as speed on them (100W/5Gbps). Then also a samsung usb c cable, which was pure white, has nothing on it and doesn't seem to support any fast charging or higher speeds..
5Gbps is conveniently unambiguous, but 10 and 20 exist in variations that use four lanes and in variations that use two lanes. According to Wikipedia, the symbols with a number are only specified for the four lanes version, but there's little doubt that half-width cables will also be be advertised with whatever bandwidth latest devices could funnel through.
In which way does svelte(kit) not have first class support for animating between states?
You can animate items being added to page, removed from page or reordered in a keyed each. This also includes pages themselves in layout files. And you can also animate an item being moved from one place to another by being removed in one place and added in another place.
Arch on 2 laptops, 2 VPSes and a minitower desktop (used as a home server).
So far everything good. On the servers, everything runs under docker, I just installed docker, nomad, consul and tailscale, which I'd have to add custom repositories for ubuntu anyway for basically the same end (except now I also have newer kernel).
Tried Debian and Ubuntu in the past, old packages (especially GUI applications, but other stuff too) often broke, and it sucked to just find that there's a fix but not in the repos - and so I had to add custom repositories for every other thing anyway.
This solves the problem of pages full of ads and keywords and irrelevant content.
It doesn't solve the problem that's talked about in the article - there are other solutions, usually alternative search engines (kagi[0], or if more AI=more better, the kagi labs with contextual answers with sources[1]. Not sponsored, just like using them. Similar service offered by Hey.com, but I didn't try them much).
Also, they do have integration with multiple LLMs - ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, Mistral and their own