this post was submitted on 01 Mar 2026
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[–] AernaLingus@hexbear.net 3 points 1 day ago (1 children)

By getting off Google and using a mix of search engines and independent sites, you are forced to make an initial conscious decision when you want to find something. You need to think not only “how do I find out this knowledge?” But “where can I find it?”

That’s a fun and fulfilling decision to make. You might still end up searching (on Brave or DuckDuckGo or Kagi or wherever, not Google), but you also may find yourself going directly to IMDB or Wikipedia or Reddit or your local news org or who knows where.

Taking Google out of things has brought me back to the yesteryears of “surfing the web” instead of just “Googling.”

It’s better.

I haven't made much of a concerted effort to degoogle, but I have been defaulting to a Google search less and less and instead going directly to where the information is. The easy stuff is setting up custom search engines: Wikipedia (and other independent wikis), dictionary sites, databases like Discogs and MusicBrainz, and so on. Not only does it cut Google out, it's actually faster and more reliable—Google's just an annoying middleman much of the time. In Firefox, at least, you can even set up search completion if the search engine supports it, so it'll probably be an even better experience than Google because it won't be shoving irrelevant stuff in as suggestions.

But in addition to that, I'm trying to lean on my bookmarks more. So if I'm looking for information about Pokémon mechanics like EVs or catch rate, I know The Cave of Dragonflies has me covered. If I want media criticism, I go straight to FAIR. The longer you take this approach, the more sites you'll build up, and on the personal web side of things you can often discover them via webrings/affiliate badges.

I also recommend pairing this with setting up an RSS reader so you can create curated/ non-algorithmic feeds of news and blog posts and the like. I use a pretty basic FOSS Android app called Read You, but there are fancier self-hosted setups which allow for syncing with other devices and such. One nice thing about RSS feeds is that they allow you to keep up with sites or people that put put high quality stuff infrequently without any real effort.

And hey, if you check out your bookmarks, you'll sometimes find pleasant surprises like the delightfully 90s web homepage that Bulbapedia has set up for Pokémon's 30th anniversary.

[–] FloridaBoi@hexbear.net 2 points 1 day ago

I’ve been trialing Kagi for search and tbh it’s great. It’s a shame I can’t integrate into iOS but I was able to make a shortcut to pass text to search on the Kagi.

For news and whatnot, going back to an RSS reader has been such a joy. No ads at all. Nothing to really annoy me other than paywalls.