search – Mr Kirkland http://mrkirkland.com (mainly) Tokyo based developer and founder Mon, 18 Jan 2016 14:58:41 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.4.2 Recipe To 150 Thousand Monthly Uniques http://mrkirkland.com/150-thousand-monthly-uniques/ http://mrkirkland.com/150-thousand-monthly-uniques/#comments Wed, 08 Apr 2015 02:40:51 +0000 http://mrkirkland.com/?p=533 My fellow Tokyo tech cheapo Greg Lane and I co-founded TokyoCheapo.com three years ago. From our humble beginnings as a little side project, our baby has really grown up. Three years on and the traffic has really jumped up, especially in the last year – from 50K monthly UV around April 2014 to 150K UV […]

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facebook-reach

My fellow Tokyo tech cheapo Greg Lane and I co-founded TokyoCheapo.com three years ago. From our humble beginnings as a little side project, our baby has really grown up.

catwang-attack-ginza-rough-small
Three years on and the traffic has really jumped up, especially in the last year – from 50K monthly UV around April 2014 to 150K UV this month. And now we’re launching a much desired Tokyo Guide Book, click here and buy this awesome book – it will save you so much money!

Since the lion share of our traffic is from organic search, you probably all want to hear about our SEO strategy. Whilst we have put work into our SEO (mostly under the expert guidance of pagespeed.io), and perhaps even a little into content marketing, I would attribute the main reasons for traffic growth to:

  1. Having identified an underserved niche
  2. Writing good well researched and detailed posts
  3. And the gratuitous overuse of kittens

80/20 rule – (approximately) the top 20% of our articles receive 80% of our traffic.

tokyo cheapo home page

1. You Need An Underserved Niche

The bad news first (if you’re trying to boost an existing content site), we had it easy. No one was really writing about Tokyo for smaller budgets but this was exactly what the world wanted. Tokyo had (still has?) a reputation for being very expensive which frightens off a lot of potential visitors. In reality Tokyo really isn’t that expensive, yet most of the popular media covering Tokyo tends to focus on the high end and extravagant (perhaps in chasing the advertising $$$) thus perpetuating the false reputation.

This is one of the main ingredients to our success, lots of people looking for the information we were putting out and no one else really writing it.

2. Good Timing

We’re also pretty good at stopping the press, photoshopping some animals into photos and pushing out a topical article should the chance suddenly arise.

traffic-spike
Though a lot of our content is fairly timeless, we’ve still managed to massively boost the audience to some of our articles by dropping them at precisely the right time. For the most part this is fairly obvious – ice cream tends to sell better in the summer, but it also includes reacting quickly when an opportunity arises.

Examples:

  • Publishing “3 nights in Tokyo on $100” a few days after the Mercer report (yet again) declared Tokyo as the world’s #1 most expensive city.
  • Making sure we put out “Top Winter Illuminations” plenty of time before Christmas
  • Slapping up a quick and totally unplanned “Halloween Report” with some snaps of the unprecedented craziness of the night before (Halloween is a new thing in Japan)

We plan ahead, and having run the site for more than a year we already know a lot of seasonal topics and opportunities. We’re also pretty good at stopping the press, photoshopping some animals into photos and pushing out a topical article should the chance suddenly arise.

3. Depth

It really sets you apart when you’re the most detailed and best on a given topic.

Unlike a lot of other clickbaity media covering Japan our articles are detailed and practical (if still a little clickbaity). Giving useful and actionable advice has been a key pillar in building the TokyoCheapo brand.

In the 3 nights article mentioned above, we spent a lot of time researching and putting together a very detailed itinerary complete with cost break down and maps. Going by the 80/20 principle it would seem counter intuitive to spend all that extra time getting all the last details, however in the case of our most popular articles the 80/20 flips round and the more detail you put in the bigger the pay off, it really sets you apart when you’re the most detailed and best on a given topic.

Tokyo Map

We’ve also decked out the site with custom location an mapping, meta data sections at the end of posts, so it’s easy for our authors to input the pertinent details and a consistent UX for our readers.

4. Good Content Often vs Crap Every Day

We’ve kept up a steady flow of articles since the beginning, at first two or three a week and now it’s more than once a day so now we have a huge archive of content. However, I would say quality trumps quantity, especially given that the 80/20 rule applies to our traffic – (approximately) the top 20% of our articles receive 80% of our traffic.

Though we’ve kept up a fairly steady rhythm we don’t force ourselves to publish every day, if we’ve got nothing good to say we shut up. Our focus is to put out good articles as often as we can.

5. Kitteh (and Dogz)

Sometimes our most useful articles have the most boring photos, but with a little help from doggie,

or Kitteh

things start to look a little better.

Kittens and puppies are the rocket fuel of the internet, use them properly and with care.

6. SEO Business

6.1 Proper Mobile First Responsive Theme

In case you didn’t get the memo, you need to make sure you have a good UX for mobile users or they won’t be coming to your site any more. We had a “responsive” theme since near the beginning, but it looked a little shabby for mobile users, so we threw it out and started again spending time on making sure the mobile views worked well.

We also have user agent detection in both our varnish set up and within WordPress. We use the device detection to serve mobile ads correctly, and we use our responsive framework’s show/hide classes to hide certain elements that clutter or slow the mobile UX.

6.2 Page Speed

page speed drop

Uncle Google tells us webmasters that we should optimize our webpages’ speed and I agree. It’s better use of technology and better UX. Moreover as you can see from the graph above, we experienced a drop in our organic traffic following a drop of the page speed ball (some cache misconfiguration that took me a month to spot).

I gave a talk about page speed and learning from running Tokyo Cheapo at UX Talk Tokyo last year, here’s a video of the slides (skip to 9:38 to jump straight to the tips):

And here’s the TLDR; takeaways from the video:

  • Via Negativa – take away the crap – we turn off plugins, purge legacy javascript and css, removed all the js social media buttons and even took a screen shot of the facebook like box to make a fake one with an image (as opposed to the 300kb and 29 reuqests it took before).
  • Caching – we have a fairly complex varnish setup, but a simpler approach that’ll still give you most the benefits would be setting up with Cloudflare, and (if on wordpress) installing W3C total cache plugin. If your content is a blog or fairly static you can cache the HTML as well as the assets (js, css etc)
  • Combine and Minify – this means putting all your js in one single file and all your css in another. This can get quite fiddly and technical, but there’s some services (like cloudflare and the W3C total cache plugin) that will attempt to do this automatically for you.
  • CDN – Content Delivery Network that is serve all your static content from a CDN. Again there’s a few services that will do this for you automagically (cloudflare, yottaa) but it’s not that tricky if you use the W3C total cache plugin.
  • Fast DNS – we switched from our own (slow) DNS to Amazon AWS service Route53, most big ISP’s probably have globally distributed DNS servers. Check your DNS lookup speed if it’s more than 100ms then it’s worth switching where you host your DNS.

6.3 Fixing WordPress Woes

wordpress is slow

6.3.1 Avoiding the Slashdot Effect

Naturally we host TokyoCheapo on the cheapest servers possible, in fact the main instance that handles all the traffic is probably around about as powerful as an iPhone 6. WordPress is not optimized to run quickly out of the box, so if our caching and CDN set-up wasn’t there our puny little servers would be destroyed instantly. Even powerful servers will buckle under pressure if they get a lot of traffic and they are running an unoptimized vanilla wordpress set-up. The main points to mitigate these issues I covered above – caching and a CDN.

6.3.2 Removing Tags

One of pagespeed.io first fixes was to jettison our entire tags archive, that is all the thousands of low quality pages under tokyocheapo.com/tags/. The idea is to keep googlebot only crawling your articles and save him/her the trouble of having to crawl auto generated and duplicate content. We’d been running the site for two years before this change and actually had a bit of traffic to some of our tag archive pages, so we could not just 404 them all.

However we had over 1000 tags to trawl through and 301 redirect to appropriate articles. I whipped up a quick script using our search engine (we use Relevanassi, which is way better than the default WP search) to quickly find the closest matched articles to tags and spit this into a massive .htaccess file of redirects. I then went through the list and manually changed a few of the redirects to more suited pages.

Analytics Data showed that the tag pages do not actually get a lot of clicks. Accidentally, we also created a lot internal near-duplicate content on some keywords using the tag feature of WordPress. We removed all tags from our blog and set 301 redirects from the one page to a page that formerly had this tag applied.

6.3.3 Changing Orange Juice To Link Juice in About US

We had a humor reference and link to an article about cheap orange juice in our “about us” box in the footer. Whilst slightly funny it wasn’t that useful to visitors and we couldn’t care less about ranking for “orange juice”, so swap the orange juice link juice to a more useful and popular article (h/t to Chris Dietrich for pointing this out.).

6.3.4 Writing More Compelling Meta Descriptions

description

We have an editorial policy of writing an informative and hopefully catchy meta descriptions for our posts. It’s not about stuffing keywords; it’s about taking advantage of those few precious lines of copy Google (usually) shows in the search results. You could think of it as copy in an adwords advert. Would you leave advert copy to some auto-generated summary by WordPress?

6.3.5 Yoast SEO Plugin

The Yoast SEO plugin takes care of a lot of SEO basics out of the box – sitemaps, canonical urls as well as giving you handy tools for making custom meta descriptions and choosing good keywords to focus on. Even a vanilla install out of the box is already quite helpful, but as mentioned above we make use of it for manually improving title and meta descriptions.

6.3.6 Inter Linking & Smart Links Plugin

No brainer, interlinking to useful, related articles on our site and other sites is helpful to our readers and something uncle Google listens to. Our writers and editor are doing this as they add artilces, plus we use this plugin to set some rules for automatically linking certain text to specific URLs.

6.4 Some Notes On Varnish

This section assumes knowledge of varnish and HTTP caching.

Varnish is a whole subject in itself, but I leave some brief notes here for my own future reference (since I keep forgetting how it works) and those of you brave enough to stray away from the comfort of cloudflare and the like.

6.4.1 Our Varnish Set Up

I started with the varnish wiki wordpress vcl example and butchered it from there. This example VCL takes care of some basics like handling PURGE requests and skipping the cache when it sees wp login cookie:

# wordpress logged in users must always pass
        if( req.url ~ "^/wp-(login|admin)" || req.http.Cookie ~ "wordpress_logged_in_" ){
                set req.backend = apache;
                return (pass);
        }

I simply blocked the wp-cron.php since we don’t use it:

# block the wp-cron.php
        if( req.url ~ "^/wp-cron" ){
                error 403 "Not permitted";
                return(error);
        }

It also drops all apache set cookies (apart from for logged in users).

# remove any remaining cookies
        unset req.http.Cookie;

Varnish is all about taming the cookie monster.

6.4.2 Getting WordPress, W3 Total Cache and Varnish To Play Nice

Since we use the W3 Total Cache plugin, our .htaccess now has a bucket load of cache rules particularly for static content (scripts etc) set by W3 Total Cache. One of the rules messes with the cache efficiency, so it’s been commented out:

 
#        Header append Vary User-Agent env=!dont-vary
    

If you have the header set to vary per user-agent, then varnish will cache a separate copy of a page for every unique browser string. This renders the cache very inefficient, since most requests will have slightly different browser identification strings, so varnish has to pass the request to apache for pretty much every new user.

Because we need granular control over the expiry times of our content (e.g. home page for 1 hour, category page 6 hours, inividual post 2 days etc), the W3 Total Cache HTTP cache expiry setting aren’t adequate, and my work around is explained below:

6.4.3 Custom Cache Expiry Headers Using .htaccess

I’ve spent a long time wrestling with wordpress to try and get it to spit out good cache headers so it plays nicely with our varnish instance. In the end I opted for hacking around in .htaccess instead. The following code uses rewrite rules to set apache environment variables (for cache age), and then below I manually set a ‘Cache-control “max-age=xxx”‘ header, first setting a default value which then gets overwritten if my “cache_age” apache environment variable has been set.

# -------- Chris's cache control hacks -----------#
# we specify resources that have special cache times - default time is below

# half a day or so
RewriteRule ^events/$ - [E=cache_age:43200]
RewriteRule ^questions/.*$ - [E=cache_age:43200]
RewriteRule ^sitemap/.*$ - [E=cache_age:43200]
RewriteRule ^accommodationcat/$ - [E=cache_age:43200]
RewriteRule ^business/$ - [E=cache_age:43200]
RewriteRule ^business/financial/$ - [E=cache_age:43200]
RewriteRule ^business/internet/$ - [E=cache_age:43200]
RewriteRule ^entertainment/$ - [E=cache_age:43200]
RewriteRule ^entertainment/art/$ - [E=cache_age:43200]
RewriteRule ^entertainment/event-posts/$ - [E=cache_age:43200]
RewriteRule ^food-and-drink/$ - [E=cache_age:43200]
RewriteRule ^food-and-drink/cafe/$ - [E=cache_age:43200]
RewriteRule ^food-and-drink/drinking/$ - [E=cache_age:43200]
RewriteRule ^lifestyle/$ - [E=cache_age:43200]
RewriteRule ^lifestyle/outdoors/$ - [E=cache_age:43200]
RewriteRule ^living/$ - [E=cache_age:43200]
RewriteRule ^living/household/$ - [E=cache_age:43200]
RewriteRule ^podcast/$ - [E=cache_age:43200]
RewriteRule ^shopping-2/$ - [E=cache_age:43200]
RewriteRule ^shopping-2/fashion/$ - [E=cache_age:43200]
RewriteRule ^travel/$ - [E=cache_age:43200]
RewriteRule ^travel/holidays/$ - [E=cache_age:43200]
RewriteRule ^travel/transport/$ - [E=cache_age:43200]

# an hour or so
RewriteRule ^feed/.*$ - [E=cache_age:3600]
RewriteRule ^$ - [E=cache_age:3600]

RewriteCond %{QUERY_STRING} ^s=(.*)$
RewriteRule . - [E=cache_age:3600]

# very long
RewriteRule ^wp-content/.*$ - [E=cache_age:6048000]

# first a catch all default - one week
Header set Cache-Control "max-age=604800"
Header set Cache-Control "max-age=%{REDIRECT_cache_age}e" env=REDIRECT_cache_age
# for some reaso the query string condition based rule above doesn't get changed to REDIRECT_cache_age
Header set Cache-Control "max-age=%{cache_age}e" env=cache_age

# -------- End of Chris's cache control hacks -----------#

6.5 Redirect Moved or Missing Pages

If you change a URL, make sure you leave a 301 redirect at the old URL, ultimately no one (especially Google) likes to land on a 404 page, no matter how many funnies it has. We brief our team not to edit the “slug” of a page once it is published, and we also check our logs and webmaster tools for 404’s that have slipped through the net.

Redirecting is simple enough, just a case of slipping one line into your .htaccess file for each URL
e.g.

Redirect 301 /old/url/ http://domain.com/new/url/

7. The Graph You Probably Want To See

And here’s an analytics graph chronicling our growth thus far:
150 uniques


catwang-attack-ginza-rough-small

8. Support Our Crowd Funding Campaign!

We’re running a crowd funding campaign for our Guide Book “A Cheapo’s Guide To Tokyo” please support us! You can help us with just three clicks.

And If you’re ever likely to visit Tokyo order a copy, it’ll save you a ton of money and time!


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My Secret Voodoo SEO Technique http://mrkirkland.com/simple-effective-seo-technique/ http://mrkirkland.com/simple-effective-seo-technique/#comments Sun, 29 Mar 2009 12:43:06 +0000 http://www.mrkirkland.com/?p=100 I’ve been on the fringe of the SEO industry for over 10 years now. I’ve have watched it change from the good old days of when keyword stuffing would get you at the top of AltaVista to the modern day which uses some of the worlds most sophisticated software and technology. And after experimenting, researching, […]

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I’ve been on the fringe of the SEO industry for over 10 years now. I’ve have watched it change from the good old days of when keyword stuffing would get you at the top of AltaVista to the modern day which uses some of the worlds most sophisticated software and technology.

And after experimenting, researching, listening to White Hats, Black Hats and an entourage of other SEO guru’s I’ve come to the conclusion that now-a-days effective “SEO” has become pretty simple. Not necessarily easy, but it is simple. The 3 steps below are my ‘secret’ formula which has worked well, for instance most of our business leads for The Artists Web come from natural search and our advertising budget is practically zero.

Step 1. Get a high Page Rank

This is more important than anything else and also significantly more difficult than the following steps. I’m sure you already know what Page Rank is – and that getting a high PR is basically down to how many quality incoming links you have. In essence what the rest of the internet is doing is more important than what you do on your own site.

In my opinion, the most effective long term ways of getting incoming links are

  • Have a regularly updated interesting website/blog
  • Create a great web service
  • Create some viral content
  • Make lots of friends

Step 2. Know your target subject and keywords

Your website has a theme, and you have a target audience you wish to attract. Obviously the theme and the search terms your target audience use must align. Moreover use keyword tools to find out the specific language most commonly used – for example is which term is most searched “sell artwork” or “sell paintings”?

Step 3. Create a high PR page for the subject/keyword in question and apply a few simple techniques

Finally you create a page on your site, give it as much page rank as you can and make sure you are using the keywords appropriately. These techniques will help, but they are no silver bullet – really the without the first step (getting the high page rank) any SEO ‘technique’ is going to be of limited use.

  • Link to the page from every page on your site, or at least from your higher PR pages e.g. the home page. This ensures you are allocating as much page rank to the page as you can.
  • Put the main keywords in the page title
  • Write a compelling Meta Description, the meta description is often used on the search results page, this is your chance to write some compelling copy which encourages people to click on your link. Don’t worry about keywords, consider it similar to writing the copy on a paid search advert.
    Meta Description appearing in search results
  • Phrase your copy to natuarlly include search phrases. This is the only ‘trick’ that I use, just bare in mind your target search phrases. e.g. for the phrase “sell paintings”:

    Okay

    Selling paintings online is easy with our service.

    Better

    Our service helps you easily sell paintings.

  • Use appropriate keywords in the url e.g.
    Bad

    /page.php?id=1232

    Good

    /how-to-sell-paintings

Surely it’s not that simple?

Well actually I think it is. Basically google (for now english language search is pretty much all about google) has some of the best brains and technology continually working to ensure it has the most relevant, useful and authoritative results. It’s therefore simple enough to presume that long term the most relevant, useful and authoritative results will tend to feature first, so really all you have to do is be relevant, useful and authoritative – simple, but not necessarily easy. Yes there are plenty of other techniques and factors (HTML validation, link anchor text, page cachebility) but none of them will make a significant difference unless you have and interesting an respected website.

Finally, don’t cheat

And don’t be tempted to go for any ‘black hat‘ SEO technique – do not run the risk of being penalised. Think long term and focus on quality.

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How to get excellent keyword search results http://mrkirkland.com/how-to-get-excellent-keyword-search-results/ http://mrkirkland.com/how-to-get-excellent-keyword-search-results/#comments Mon, 02 Mar 2009 13:21:30 +0000 http://www.mrkirkland.com/?p=94 After many years of toil, sweat and sacrifice I believe I have finally unraveled the secret to obtaining long term ‘excellent’ keyword search results. Firstly, one needs to understand what “excellent keyword search results” actually means. And of course (as I’m sure you’re wise enough to know without being told), they refer to the most […]

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After many years of toil, sweat and sacrifice I believe I have finally unraveled the secret to obtaining long term ‘excellent’ keyword search results.

Firstly, one needs to understand what “excellent keyword search results” actually means. And of course (as I’m sure you’re wise enough to know without being told), they refer to the most amusing results.

Top 10 Keywords, Sentence Game, January 2009

top 10 search terms sentence game 2009

amazing!

5 steps to success

  1. Start a simple word game website
  2. Wait for ‘mature’ males to start playing
  3. Stand back and watch the endless reams of nonsense and toilet humour amass
  4. Soon google will have enthusiastically sucked up all your “original” content
  5. Success! long term page 1 ranking for “spastic porn”, “frotage” etc.

Conclusion

Now-a-days, having retired from fortune acrued of the tens of $0.01 google adsense clicks each month, I spend most my days idling on the deck of my San Tropez yacht being fed organic grapes whilst simultaneously being massaged and bathed in goats milk.

Further reading check out the sentence game.

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Domain names in Japan http://mrkirkland.com/domain-names-in-japan/ http://mrkirkland.com/domain-names-in-japan/#respond Sat, 19 Jan 2008 03:01:09 +0000 http://www.mrkirkland.com/domain-names-in-japan/ Not long after the first time I arrived in Tokyo I noticed (amongst a vast array of other wierd and wonderful things) a common trend among the advertisements on the metro, TV and just about anywhere, and that was the ‘search term’ call to action. Although most of the paper adverts will at least list […]

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p1010481.JPG

Not long after the first time I arrived in Tokyo I noticed (amongst a vast array of other wierd and wonderful things) a common trend among the advertisements on the metro, TV and just about anywhere, and that was the ‘search term’ call to action. Although most of the paper adverts will at least list a URL the real call to action is search box with the keywords inside and a mouse pointer hovering over the search button.

This struck me as a dangerous strategy – intstantly you’re telling your competition which terms to bid on and in many cases these terms are quite esoteric and not particularly hard to get natural rankings for. In fact I actually did a little experiment, and for the keyword of one particular advert I put up an almost empty page with the japanese keyword as the title and within a few weeks start receiving search traffic, I think the page still ranks about 6th (look for anglojapanese.net): search for てんるす.

However I have since come to the realisation that this search call to action is much easier for the Japanese customers to remember than a URL using the (less familiar) Roman alphabet, therefore it’s a risk advertisers have to take. So why not use japanese words in the domain? Anyone West of Turkey will be familiar with the heavy use of keyword domains – www.cheapfilghts.co.uk etc. Can’t the japanese do this aswell?

Well they can, as any ‘domainer’ out there will tell you, one has been able to register “International Domain Names” (i.e. domains with non-roman alphabets – chinese, cyrillic etc.) for a number of years now. But (a big but) good old microsoft have only started to support use of IDNs with IE7, so this is probably a key factor.

Anyway I would expect this trend to change in the near future as IE6 usuage shrinks while more modern browsers with IDN support, such as firefox and IE7 take hold. So I’d hazzard a guess Japanese Language urls start cropping up on the metro ads. In fact I’ve taken a punt myself: インテリアアート.jp
オフショア.jp
モダンアート.jp
アート販売.com
オフィスレンタル.jp
水彩.jp
現代作家.com
ネットギャラリー.jp

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Wikia Search Reviewers Missing the point http://mrkirkland.com/wikia-search-reviewers-missing-the-point/ http://mrkirkland.com/wikia-search-reviewers-missing-the-point/#comments Tue, 08 Jan 2008 01:10:14 +0000 http://www.mrkirkland.com/wikia-search-reviewers-missing-the-point/ Wikia Search having launched into Alpha today has received a number of negative reivews, but I these reviewers are clearly missing the point. I would forgive them for not understanding what an “alpha relase” is, but the apparent tech centricity of their publishing sites does not allow such concession. When I heard Mr Wales speak […]

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Wikia Search having launched into Alpha today has received a number of negative reivews, but I these reviewers are clearly missing the point. I would forgive them for not understanding what an “alpha relase” is, but the apparent tech centricity of their publishing sites does not allow such concession.

When I heard Mr Wales speak at the FCCJ in Tokyo last April, I was inspired by his plans for an open search engine. Clearly the key point behind Wikia Search is to built a platform based on openess and to share the technology with the world. To compare an alpha release of this bold project with Google is like comparing a spritely toddler with a top olympic athlete as though they were both adults.

Anyway Jimmy posted a response on the tech crunch article which eloqently makes this point:

Release early, release often.

It’s a project to *build* a search engine, not a search engine. We’ve been telling everyone that constantly. I’m sorry Michael’s disappointed, but having said that, we didn’t build it for him, but for people who think that openness, transparency, and participation are more important than slick releases.

When I launched Wikipedia, I wrote at the top of the first page “Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia”. On that day, anyone reviewing it would have laughed. What’s this? There’s nothing here! This is not an encyclopedia, it is an empty website with some funny editing syntax!

So the comparison to Google on day one is just mistaken. Google didn’t launch a project to build a human-powered search engine, they launched an algorithmic search engine with a clever new idea. So they didn’t have to wait for the humans to come in and start building it.

We aren’t even running with a real index yet, just a placeholder index. Yeah, the search sucks today. But that’s not the point. The point is that we are building something different.

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