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google search
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lmgtfy.com "humour, web" A somewhat sarcastic {web} service that animates the action of searching on {Google}. Instead of displaying the search results, the site creates a self-referential URL like {(http://lmgtfy.com/?q=GIYF)} that takes you to a page showing an animation of the actions of clicking in the Google search box, entering some text and clicking the submit button. It then takes you to the results on Google. The link is intended be sent to in answer to a question that could easily have been answered by Google. It is a more polite, if long-winded, way of saying {JFGI} or {STFW}. In the belief that it is better to teach a man to fish than to give him a fish, the service helps the recipient to help himself while succinctly conveying the message that he is too stupid to use Google. (2014-05-23)
KEYS (10k)
NEW FULL DB (2.4M)
6 Seth Stephens Davidowitz
3 Laszlo Bock
3 Anonymous
2 Neil deGrasse Tyson
2 Nate Silver
2 Apryl Baker
*** WISDOM TROVE ***
*** NEWFULLDB 2.4M ***
1:Research now means a Google search. ~ John Palfrey, #NFDB
2:No way do I ever want to try to do anything without my trusty Google search. ~ Apryl Baker, #NFDB
3:No way do I ever want to try to do anything without my trusty Google search. “So ~ Apryl Baker, #NFDB
4:The Google search engine is, arguably, the greatest AI system that has yet been built. ~ Nick Bostrom, #NFDB
5:Summer’s ending and the closest thing I’ve had to an adventure was a Google search of Baja California. ~ Samantha Hunt, #NFDB
6:(a Google search for “estranged husband” and “killed” brings up more than fifteen million results). ~ Rachel Louise Snyder, #NFDB
7:There's actually a lot of bullshit in my Google search. They killed me in one of them! I died in one of my Google searches. ~ Kevin Hart, #NFDB
8:Don't know if it's good or bad that a Google search on “Big Bang Theory” lists the sitcom before the origin of the Universe ~ Neil deGrasse Tyson, #NFDB
9:Don’t know if it’s good or bad that a Google search on “Big Bang Theory” lists the sitcom before the origin of the Universe ~ Neil deGrasse Tyson, #NFDB
10:Things like Google search traffic patterns, for instance, can serve as leading indicators for economic data series like unemployment. ~ Nate Silver, #NFDB
11:Are we playing Faster Fingers or are we thinking?” Faster Fingers was their code for supplanting brain/memory with Google Search. ~ David Cronenberg, #NFDB
12:had a hunch that people wanted to keep jellyfish as pets, so he created a test website and bought $100 in Google search ads. Lo and behold, his ~ Anonymous, #NFDB
13:Honestly, I suspect that in this day and age most murders could be solved by the correct Google search. It could be a web series. CSI: Bing. I ~ Max Wirestone, #NFDB
14:The first move was to turn to the one great, perfectly visible and certified revolution in the recent history of the human race [the Google search-engine]. ~ Nicola Lagioia, #NFDB
15:We were decades, still, from a time when a simple Google search would bring up a head-spinning array of charts, statistics, and medical explainers that either gave or took away hope. ~ Michelle Obama, #NFDB
16:Boys are rewarded for playing games where they line up by height and then run into walls. Perhaps I'm making that up--or perhaps you should do a Google search for "Guy Runs into Wall for Fun. ~ Gina Barreca, #NFDB
17:I didn't know that there was such a thing as butter carving. But then, I poked around a little bit. A quick Google search will show you 55,000 images of butter carvings, and they're extraordinary. ~ Ty Burrell, #NFDB
18:Just do a Google search on it. The Bible’s definition of marriage. New Testament. When you read it, you’ll see what I mean. God’s the Master of D/s. So how’s married life?” He moved on, oh so confident. ~ Lucian Bane, #NFDB
19:So everything is an algorithm now. And just as every Google search uses its algorithms to produce a different result for each person searching, so can algorithms customize products for their consumers. For ~ Chris Anderson, #NFDB
20:I think people need to understand that deep learning is making a lot of things, behind-the-scenes, much better. Deep learning is already working in Google search, and in image search; it allows you to image search a term like "hug." ~ Geoffrey Hinton, #NFDB
21:A quick Google search reveals there to be seven, ten, five, four or eight ‘years to save the planet’, depending on your headline writer and expert of choice (‘Eleven years to save the planet’ seems at the moment a rallying cry still up for grabs). ~ Bill Bryson, #NFDB
22:Although the Internet could be making all of us smarter, it makes many of us stupider, because it's not just a magnet for the curious. It's a sinkhole for the gullible. It renders everyone an instant expert. You have a degree? Well, I did a Google search! ~ Frank Bruni, #NFDB
23:Not only is a good name catchy and memorable, it should help people understand what your business does. If your name reflects your products or services you'll have a much better chance of being found [via Google search], so it's important to choose wisely. ~ Lori Greiner, #NFDB
24:Mr Costeja González’s case started four years ago when he realised a Google search of his name threw up a link to a 1998 article on a Barcelona news website, which contained the details of a house he was forced to auction off to settle his social security debts. ~ Anonymous, #NFDB
25:The visual palette suggests the creepy pastel paintings of Guy Peellaert (Rock Dreams); the fantasy battles with monsters and samurais echo the muscular landscapes of Frank Frazetta and Boris Vallejo. The movie is like an arrested adolescent's Google search run amok. ~ Richard Corliss, #NFDB
26:Google and others truncate headlines at 70 characters. On the Manti Teo story, Deadspin's scoop fell down the Google search results, overtaken by copycat stories with simpler headlines. Deadspin's headline was 118 characters. Vital information - 'hoax' - was one of the words that was cut off. ~ Nick Denton, #NFDB
27:If you just do a Google search and type in 'smoking' or 'lung cancer', you will be barraged with never ending facts and numbers, like how one in every three Americans is affected by lung disease and how COPD is the third leading cause of death and if you get lung cancer the odds are 95% that you will die. ~ Matthew Gray Gubler, #NFDB
28:If you think that leadership is deciding what you want and telling people to do it, I feel sorry for you. Reality is going kick your ass so far that not even Google will find you. The goal of this chapter is to help you become such a great leader that you’ll appear on the first page of a Google search for “leader. ~ Guy Kawasaki, #NFDB
29:There have been women who stumbled across Feministing randomly, through a bizarre Google search or something, and had no idea what feminism was. They thought it was something older women do, or bought into the hairy bra-burning man-hating stereotype 100 percent. Anything that deviates from that is very exciting for them. ~ Jessica Valenti, #NFDB
30:This constant stream of unrealistic media dogpiles onto our existing feelings of insecurity, by overexposing us to the unrealistic standards we fail to live up to. Not only do we feel subjected to unsolvable problems, but we feel like losers because a simple Google search shows us thousands of people without those same problems. ~ Mark Manson, #NFDB
31:In 1998, if you searched “cars” on a popular pre-Google search engine, you were inundated with porn sites. These porn sites had written the word “cars” frequently in white letters on a white background to trick the search engine. They then got a few extra clicks from people who meant to buy a car but got distracted by the porn. ~ Seth Stephens Davidowitz, #NFDB
32:But just to make sure, I went down to the library, switched on the computer and typed ‘vampire vs. werewolf fight winner’ into the Google search browser.
The machine whirred for zero point twenty-three seconds before it came up with some four million results. Obviously, I wasn’t the only nutter interested in this stuff. I clicked on the first link and groaned. Over sixty per cent thought a werewolf would kick a vamp’s ass any time. Dammit! ~ Jayde Scott,#NFDB
33:There’s sort of a collective AI in Google Search, where we’re all sort of plugged in like nodes on the network; like leaves on a big tree. And we’re all feeding this network with our questions and answers. We’re all collectively programming the AI. And Google, plus all the humans that connect to it, are one giant cybernetic collective. This is also true of Facebook and Twitter and Instagram, and all these social networks. They’re giant cybernetic collectives. ~ Elon Musk, Human Civilization and AI, #NFDB
34:He was boring…well, he still kind of is.” She smirks like she just gave him a jab that he could really hear. “All work and no play. Until you. Why do you think the press went so wild? They’ve been trying to catch him with a woman for years, then he’s running all over town with one. Trust me, he’s not boinking the secretary. I’ve known him since college, and I’d never even seen him date until he met you.” I know that’s true. I’d done my shameful Google search the first time I’d met him. It had come up with nothing. Never ~ Alexa Riley, #NFDB
35:Good questions are those that show that you not only want the job, you are prepared to knock the ball out of the park once you have it. So ask, “What would a successful year in the job look like?” or “What did you most value in the person who left?” You’ve done a Google search of the field and the company, of course, and one of your questions could be about emerging trends. Interviewers love it when questions relate to them and their accomplishments (“I’ve heard you made some exciting changes recently. What has the outcome been?”). ~ Kate White, #NFDB
36:Boys are rewarded for playing games where they line up by height and then run into walls. Perhaps I'm making that up--or perhaps you should do a Google search for "Guy Runs into Wall for Fun."
Not only do women hold up half the sky; we do it while carrying a 500-pound purse.
From age sixteen to age twenty, a woman's body is a temple. From twenty-one to forty-five, it's an amusement park. From forty-five on, it's a terrarium.
Bring your sense of humor with you at all times. Bring your friends with a sense of humor. If their friends have a sense of humor, invite them, too ~ Gina Barreca,#NFDB
37:I remember at the time - right before we started Feministing.com - doing a Google search for the term "young feminism" and the term "young feminist," and the first thing that came up was a page from the National Organization for Women that was about 10 or 15 years old. And it just struck me as so odd that there was all of this young feminist activism going on, but that it wasn't necessarily being represented online, that the first things in a Google search to come up were really, really old. I think to a certain degree we really filled a gap, and that's why we got such a large readership. ~ Jessica Valenti, #NFDB
38:Patients, beings who want to be rehabilitated, send me questions See? I answer them real fast, 1 2 3 done Like so You get?' Toby said, his pale green fingers clattering across the keyboard.
'I think so,' I said, shifting in my chair.
'Okay hear we go First question: I just moved to a new city and there's a school next door All the kids, every last student, wear the same clothes Are they all related Is this one of those mafia families I need to be careful around You know the answer? Toby asked, swiveling to face me.
'Perhaps,' I said after thinking a moment. It took a second to distinguish when the question ended and when Toby's remarks started.
'You sure, I can check real quick 1 2 3 I check that fast,' Toby said, his words zooming out of his mouth while Google search engine popped up on his computer screen. ~ K M Shea,#NFDB
39:[1] I do not want to sound as though I am in any way blaming Judy Nilan for what happened to her, but I want to say something here to any female reading this book. If you are a jogger/walker, I beg of you to take a different route each time you head out for a run, even if you change it up just a little bit. No matter where you live, no matter how safe you think you are, there could be a psychopath like Scott Deojay lurking in the shadows, watching you run/walk by his house or place of employment every single day, and as each day passes, he might become more and more obsessed with you to the point where he needs to act out on the twisted fantasies flowing through his mind. Don’t give him that satisfaction. Take a different route. And also, please check the sex offender’s registry in your area with a quick Google search and find out where the sex offenders in your neighborhood live. Believe me, no matter where you live, there are sex offenders near you. Again, I am in no way blaming Judy Nilan for what happened to her by saying this, but let us learn something from Judy’s brutal murder. ~ M William Phelps, #NFDB
40:No one has been able to aggregate more intention data on what consumers like than Google. Google not only sees you coming, but sees where you’re going. When homicide investigators arrive at a crime scene and there is a suspect—almost always the spouse—they check the suspect’s search history for suspicious Google queries (like “how to poison your husband”). I suspect we’re going to find that U.S. agencies have been mining Google to understand the intentions of more than some shopper thinking about detergent, but cells looking for fertilizer to build bombs. Google controls a massive amount of behavioral data. However, the individual identities of users have to be anonymized and, to the best of our knowledge, grouped. People are not comfortable with their name and picture next to a list of all the things they have typed into the Google query box. And for good reasons. Take a moment to imagine your picture and your name above everything you have typed into that Google search box. You’ve no doubt typed in some crazy shit that you would rather other people not know. So, Google has to aggregate this data, and can only say that people of this age or people of this cohort, on average, type in these sorts of things into their Google search box. Google still has a massive amount of data it can connect, if not to specific identities, to specific groups. ~ Scott Galloway, #NFDB
41:Google had a built-in disadvantage in the social networking sweepstakes. It was happy to gather information about the intricate web of personal and professional connections known as the “social graph” (a term favored by Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg) and integrate that data as signals in its search engine. But the basic premise of social networking—that a personal recommendation from a friend was more valuable than all of human wisdom, as represented by Google Search—was viewed with horror at Google. Page and Brin had started Google on the premise that the algorithm would provide the only answer. Yet there was evidence to the contrary. One day a Googler, Joe Kraus, was looking for an anniversary gift for his wife. He typed “Sixth Wedding Anniversary Gift Ideas” into Google, but beyond learning that the traditional gift involved either candy or iron, he didn’t see anything creative or inspired. So he decided to change his status message on Google Talk, a line of text seen by his contacts who used Gmail, to “Need ideas for sixth anniversary gift—candy ideas anyone?” Within a few hours, he got several amazing suggestions, including one from a colleague in Europe who pointed him to an artist and baker whose medium was cake and candy. (It turned out that Marissa Mayer was an investor in the company.) It was a sobering revelation for Kraus that sometimes your friends could trump algorithmic search. ~ Steven Levy, #NFDB
Wikipedia - ElgooG -- Mirrored website of Google Search
Wikipedia - Google Penguin -- Google search engine algorithm update
Wikipedia - Google Search Appliance
Wikipedia - Google Search Console
Wikipedia - Google search
Wikipedia - Google Search -- Web search engine developed by Google
Wikipedia - Google SearchWiki
Wikipedia - Google (verb) -- Transitive verb, meaning to search for something using the Google search engine
Integral World - The Missing Nuance: A Four-Part Critique, Part Three: Ken Wilber, Chroma Casting, and Google Searches, David Lane
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Chuck_Norris_-_Google_Search.jpg
Google Search
Google Search Appliance
Google Search Console
Google SearchWiki
Timeline of Google Search
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