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I’ve been paying for Kagi search engine (a thing I never thought I’d pay for) for many months and it has a lot of what you’re asking for.


I pay for Kagi Ultimate, and it does almost none of what OP asked for. The only thing you could say it does is searching curated content from other people they trust - that is fulfilled by the custom lens feature, since they can be shared.


Same here. Paying for Kagi, and I don't ever use Google for search now. No ads, no SEO shilling, I can curate my own search results, and it's fast.

That's a winner for me.


another paying (happy) Kagi customer here...


> by pooling data from 3 large cohorts, we could explore heterogeneity across key population subgroups, including understudied sociodemographic subgroups, which was identified as a research gap in the 2022 USPSTF review.3 In stratified analyses, we found no evidence of effect modification by race and ethnicity, education, or diet quality.


If they don’t want them anymore why not just lay them off? Why this beating around the bush, slimy bullshit?


I don’t know what makes an inanimate object ugly, but the crookie captures it.


reading sideways sucks


Summary:

“The proton is an incredibly complex particle that physicists are still working to fully understand. Experiments over decades have revealed that the proton is not just three quarks, but contains a sea of transient gluons and quark-antiquark pairs. The HERA accelerator provided evidence of this "gluon dandelion" structure by detecting low-momentum quarks and antiquarks emerging from gluon splitting. Most recently, machine learning analysis of thousands of proton snapshots found traces of heavy charm quarks within the proton, suggesting its makeup is a quantum mixture of different quark states. Future experiments like the Electron-Ion Collider aim to map out the spins and 3D structure of quarks and gluons inside the proton.

One interesting finding highlighted is the recent discovery, through machine learning analysis of past proton data, that the proton contains traces of heavy charm quarks, implying its composition involves different quark combinations in a quantum superposition. This suggests the proton's makeup is more complex than previously understood.”


Summary:

“Amelia Earhart went missing in 1937 during her attempted circumnavigation of the globe when she failed to find Howland Island, as intended radio navigation assistance from the Itasca ship was compromised by issues with her plane's radio equipment. Specifically, Earhart had mistakenly designated 7.5 megacycles as the Itasca's beacon frequency, which was too high for her plane's direction finder to get a bearing from. This prevented her from coordinating with the Itasca. Intriguingly, radio signals later intercepted by stations in the Pacific showed Earhart's plane was still operational for hours after she went missing, suggesting she survived the initial landing but could not be reached due to radio problems. Unfortunately, no definitive evidence of her final fate has ever been discovered.”


Not exactly an impartial source coming from their competitor who is also almost fully funded by their other competitor.


Which specific idea(s) presented do you believe has its merits undermined by this lack of impartiality?


Erm, maybe this idea:

> This report was commissioned by Mozilla


Point being: these researchers were chosen by, and paid by Mozilla to do this. The researchers have a strong incentive to be biased; to leave out details; to p-hack. Though they claim to be neutral, no human is capable of being unbiased, especially when his paycheck depends on it.

I have nothing but utmost respect for Mozilla and these researchers, but the paper needs to be read not as facts, but merely conjectures, to be verified by other more neutral parties.


I also can’t stand when I want to debug a single table test with VSCode debugger+dlv and I have to comment out hundreds of lines of table tests.


I find it annoying that the tl;dr summarizes two sentences.


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