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Typo: s/Runaroo/Runnaroo/g

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Rohan Kumar 2021-03-13 21:23:29 -08:00
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@ -31,7 +31,7 @@ These are large engines that pass all the above tests and more.
1. Google: the biggest index. Allows submitting pages and sitemaps for crawling, but requires login. Powers a few other engines:
* Startpage
* Runaroo
* Runnaroo
* SAPO (Portuguese interface, can work with English results)
2. Bing: the runner-up. Allows submitting pages and sitemaps for crawling, but requires login. Its index powers many other engines:
@ -115,7 +115,7 @@ Results from these search engines dont seem at all useful.
These indexing search engines dont have a Google-like “ask me anything” endgame; theyre trying to do something different.
* Wiby: I love this one. It focuses on smaller independent sites that capture the spirit of the “early” web. Its more focused on “discovering” new interesting pages that match a set of keywords than finding a specific resources. I like to think of Wiby as an engine for surfing, not searching. Runaroo occasionally features a hit from Wiby. If you have a small site or blog that isnt very “commercial”, consider submitting it to the index.
* Wiby: I love this one. It focuses on smaller independent sites that capture the spirit of the “early” web. Its more focused on “discovering” new interesting pages that match a set of keywords than finding a specific resources. I like to think of Wiby as an engine for surfing, not searching. Runnaroo occasionally features a hit from Wiby. If you have a small site or blog that isnt very “commercial”, consider submitting it to the index.
* Search My Site: Similar to Wiby, but only indexes user-submitted personal and independent sites. It optionally supports IndieAuth.
* Quor: seems to mainly index large news sites.

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@ -44,7 +44,7 @@ These are large engines that pass all the above tests and more.
- Google: the biggest index. Allows submitting pages and sitemaps for crawling, but requires login. Powers a few other engines:
- Startpage
- Runaroo
- Runnaroo
- SAPO (Portuguese interface, can work with English results)
- Bing: the runner-up. Allows submitting pages and sitemaps for crawling, but requires login. Its index powers many other engines:
- Yahoo
@ -106,7 +106,7 @@ Non-generalist search
These indexing search engines don't have a Google-like "ask me anything" endgame; they're trying to do something different.
- Wiby: [wiby.me](https://wiby.me) and [wiby.org](https://wiby.org): I love this one. It focuses on smaller independent sites that capture the spirit of the "early" web. It's more focused on "discovering" new interesting pages that match a set of keywords than finding a specific resources. I like to think of Wiby as an engine for surfing, not searching. Runaroo occasionally features a hit from Wiby. If you have a small site or blog that isn't very "commercial", consider submitting it to the index.
- Wiby: [wiby.me](https://wiby.me) and [wiby.org](https://wiby.org): I love this one. It focuses on smaller independent sites that capture the spirit of the "early" web. It's more focused on "discovering" new interesting pages that match a set of keywords than finding a specific resources. I like to think of Wiby as an engine for surfing, not searching. Runnaroo occasionally features a hit from Wiby. If you have a small site or blog that isn't very "commercial", consider submitting it to the index.
- [Search My Site](https://searchmysite.net): Similar to Wiby, but only indexes user-submitted personal and independent sites. It optionally supports IndieAuth.
- [Quor](https://www.quor.com): seems to mainly index large news sites.