Mac Search Engine

Apple is launching a search engine called “Spotlight,” at a pace of 3% a quarter -- if you have an iPhone or Mac you’ve been using it for a while!

Google has gone from unstoppable to “about to be stopped,” in the minds of the smartest folks in the industry. Search ads are Google’s cash cow; unfortunately, for them, it seems that Google is not advancing the platform (outside of slamming massive amounts of “paid inclusion”).

“Paid Inclusion” is basically the ads that consumers think are content, but are really ads.

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  • How to remove a browser hijacker from the Mac. What is a browser hijacker? In many cases, browsers open fake or legitimate search engines, or various dubious websites when the user opens a new window, tab, or attempts to search via the URL bar.
  • The Mac version of Brave lets you add any search engine you want as the default, but unfortunately this doesn’t hold true on iOS, where you’re limited to the five options of Google, Bing.

See all results from your Mac in the Finder: Scroll to the bottom of the results, then click Search in Finder. To refine the results in the Finder, see Narrow your search results. During downtime, or if you reach the time limit set for apps in Screen Time preferences, app icons in results are dimmed and an hourglass icon is shown. A depth scan of your Mac PC will be executed in order to detect Default Search Engine. If the Anti-virus scan report says “no threat found” then you can continue with guide further. On the other hand, it is recommended to delete the detected Default Search Engine infection before continuing.

You can see this on your desktop by doing a search for “used iPhone.” The majority of the screen real estate is now ads! In the example above 11 of the 12 links are advertisements!

Wow.

On top of that, < 1% of the screen real estate is dedicated to telling this insane fact to consumers! See the tiny ‘AD’ and ‘SPONSORED’ logos? Yeah, barely noticeable … by design.

In the old days Google used to highlight the ads with a background color … over time they have included smaller and smaller notes; this is, of course, a huge debate in the industry. In fact, people have done studies to prove that a large percentage of users don’t know they are clicking on ads.

GOOGLE GRINDS, APPLE SHINES

While Google is grinding users down with 90% of search results generating ad links (10 of 11), Apple is building a search engine in plain sight called “Spotlight.”

Spotlight is what happens on your desktop when you hit COMMAND-SPACE or on your phone when you hit “slide down” when on your home screen. Aster v7 keygen by dy5phoric.

For example: when you search for “Weather Cupertino” it gives you the result with no advertisements, no Google logo -- nothing but content. Mockflow 1 4 7 – collaborative wireframing for app development.

On your mobile phone they will show you Wikipedia pages, App Store links and more -- without any ads.

Every time Apple hosts their World Wide Developer Conference (WWDC) they add a couple of features to Spotlight. The big update came yesterday, with “deep link searching in apps.” Here they show folks searching for “how to make chocolate cake” and subsequently dumping users into the Yummy App.

No. Google. Necessary.

In fact, Apple added the ability to do basic math in the search bar -- something Google added back in 2008.

Tim Cook is slowly getting revenge on Google on behalf of Steve Jobs -- without doing it directly. When Jobs found out that Google was secretly going to compete with the iPhone he reportedly said:

“We did not enter the search business, Jobs said. They entered the phone business. Make no mistake they want to kill the iPhone. We won’t let them, he says. Someone else asks something on a different topic, but there’s no getting Jobs off this rant. I want to go back to that other question first and say one more thing, he says. This don’t be evil mantra: “It’s bullshit.

So, Tim Cook is playing the slow revenge game, by going into the search business. At this pace, I could see Apple knocking 10 points off Google’s search business here in the USA in the next couple of years by simply making search an advertising-free piece of Apple’s OPERATING SYSTEM!

Mac Search Engine Bing

At the WWDC, Apple made a point of saying that they don’t store or use your personal information. This slide is the “f$&k Google” slide, a straight kick in the nuts of Google’s absurd privacy practices, which include searching through our emails and tracking every behavior we make online.

Tim Cook is suggesting a better path for users: Apple will give you the ability to search for “free,” as in ad-free and data-collection-free.

Apple is leapfrogging Google by making search something that is built into the core of your mobile phone and desktop. The reason to do this is that you can compress time by removing the need to visit a website like Google.com.

However, don’t be surprised if Apple gives spotlight.com $10m for their domain name and makes a web-based search engine as a final F-U to Google.

In fact, the power move for Apple would be to buy DuckDuckGo and use their excellent web search as backfill to the powerful “One Box” search innovations they keep launching every couple of months.

[ One Box are the “answers” you see at the top of search. The answers that Google frequently scrapes from content sites, keeping you from having to visit the partners who paid to create that content! ]

Mac Search Engine

EVERYONE HATES GOOGLE

Mac Search Engine

Google has encouraged the competition they are getting by grinding consumers with a never-ending advertising assault, not to mention how they have screwed over their partners from Yelp to eHow to YouTubers (and my last company Mahalo -- not that I’m bitter! OK, I’m really bitter about it … that happens when you have to lay off 75 people because Google changed their algorithm specifically to screw you and other competitors).

Management at Google stopped listening to, and started grinding, consumers and partners shortly after they went public. Executives at Google were always a little odd, but they didn’t used to be marauders. They were nerds who wanted to spread the wealth and build up huge partnerships.

Onenote class notebook. However, inside sources tell me the pro-partnership, extroverted executives were driven out and the more introverted, intelligentsia took over. Those introverted innovators used their massive success -- built off of founders and users who loved them -- and went on a “win it all” campaign.

That “win it all” effort is going to wind up delivering a comeuppance for Google’s insular executive team. Right now the government, all their former partners and, recently, a growing consumer contingent, are all rooting for Google to fail.

Message to Larry: when you go from loved for giving users unlimited storage with GMAIL and saving YouTube from legal destruction, to being hated by everyone, you’re doing it wrong!

Google needs to 10x how they treat their constituents -- which is EXACTLY what Tim Cook is doing. Tim Cook is painting Google, accurately, as the evil successor to Microsoft, and Google’s management team is reinforcing this by closing ranks and destroying their partners.

Google has a tin ear when it comes to how they are perceived, and if anything will be their downfall, this will be.

best @jason

PS - I’m hosting a Bastille Day/Demo Day Party, complete with a Petanque tournament on July 14th. We’re going to take the afternoon off and play, celebrate and congratulate all these great entrepreneurs who are fighting it out in the arena every day! If you’re an active angel investor or a member of the press, email bastilleday@launch.co.

PPS - If you’re an accredited investor and you want to invest in the same startups I’m investing in, you can sign up for my AngelList Syndicate at angel.co/jason/syndicate.

PPPS - We are hiring two audio/video/directors here in San Francisco to work on my podcast This Week in Startups. It’s literally the greatest job in the Bay area if your passion is video, podcasting and/or startups. You can apply here!