1
0
Fork 0
mirror of https://git.sr.ht/~seirdy/seirdy.one synced 2024-09-19 11:52:11 +00:00

Add focus on self-hostability to Peekr

This commit is contained in:
Seirdy 2024-08-09 22:00:33 -04:00
parent 1f437024f6
commit e02dcff4ca
No known key found for this signature in database
GPG key ID: 1E892DB2A5F84479
2 changed files with 2 additions and 2 deletions

View file

@ -107,7 +107,7 @@ Yep supports Open Graph and some JSON-LD at the moment. A look through the sourc
These engines fail badly at a few important tests. Otherwise, they seem to work well enough.
* Peekr (formerly SvMetaSearch, not to be confused with Peekier): Originally a SearxNG metasearch engine that also included results from its own index, it's since diverged. It now appears to return all results from its own growing ElasticSearch index. Open source.
* Peekr (formerly SvMetaSearch, not to be confused with Peekier): Originally a SearxNG metasearch engine that also included results from its own index, it's since diverged. It now appears to return all results from its own growing ElasticSearch index. Open source, with an emphasis on self-hostability.
* Infotiger: My favorite engine in this section. It offers advanced result filtering and sports a somewhat large index. It allows site submission for English and German pages. The fastest-improving engine in this section; I look forward to the day it "graduates" to the previous section. Infotiger also has a Tor hidden service.
* seekport: The interface is in German but it supports searching in English just fine. The default language is selected by your locale. Its really good considering its small index; it hasnt heard of less common terms, but its able to find relevant results in other tests. It's the second-fastest-improving engines in this section.
* Exalead: slow, quality is hit-and-miss. Its indexer claims to crawl the DMOZ directory, which has since shut down and been replaced by the Curlie directory. No relevant results for “Oppenheimer” and some other history-related queries. Allows submitting individual URLs for indexing, but requires solving a Google reCAPTCHA and entering an email address.

View file

@ -138,7 +138,7 @@ These engines fail badly at a few important tests. Otherwise, they seem to work
[Peekr (formerly SvMetaSearch, not to be confused with Peekier)](https://peekr.org/)
: Originally a SearxNG metasearch engine that also included results from its own index, it's since diverged. It now appears to return all results from its own growing ElasticSearch index. Open source.
: Originally a SearxNG metasearch engine that also included results from its own index, it's since diverged. It now appears to return all results from its own growing ElasticSearch index. Open source, with an emphasis on self-hostability.
[Infotiger](https://alpha.infotiger.com/)
: My favorite engine in this section. It offers advanced result filtering and sports a somewhat large index. It allows site submission for English and German pages. The fastest-improving engine in this section: I use it often to discover new sites, and look forward to the day it "graduates" to the previous section. [Infotiger also has a Tor hidden service](http://infotiger4xywbfq45mvd5drh43jpqeurakg2ya7gqwvjf2bbwnixzqd.onion/).