Interesting thing, that death clock. It calculated me 70 years, a full 17 years less than my grandfather's lifespan, who was a couch potato and slightly overweight most of his life. Maybe because I put 'pessimistic'?
Kagi doesn’t display ads. You can also block domains from appearing in results (like Pinterest). For me, it’s worth it. But Duck Duck Go is also excellent.
I wanted to comment on Mark's review of Kagi. This sounded amazing, until I hit the $10/month price tag. It made me think of "The Matrix" in which humans are unknowingly used as batteries. While the movie is easy to dismiss as a dystopian fantasy, Kagi reminded me that unplugging from the Matrix is, depressingly, not free. My data and I will have to keep feeding the machine that uses my data to enrich Google and other big companies until I can justify the $120/yr to unplug and get that clean user experience of vintage Google that you describe.
Claudia how did you track your energy levels? I’m curious about this
Interesting thing, that death clock. It calculated me 70 years, a full 17 years less than my grandfather's lifespan, who was a couch potato and slightly overweight most of his life. Maybe because I put 'pessimistic'?
I tried the Death Clock. Depending on the Outlook I select, I get the following:
- Optimistic: I live to be 86
- Neutral: I live to be 71
- Pessimistic: I live to be 65 (yikes!)
FWIW, my BMI is 24.7, but it won't let me select anything below 25, so I chose 25.
I guess my Outlook is "Skeptical" (not one of the choices)
What is the difference between Kagi and Duck Duck Go?
Kagi doesn’t display ads. You can also block domains from appearing in results (like Pinterest). For me, it’s worth it. But Duck Duck Go is also excellent.
I’ll live to 109?? That’s pretty suspect
I wanted to comment on Mark's review of Kagi. This sounded amazing, until I hit the $10/month price tag. It made me think of "The Matrix" in which humans are unknowingly used as batteries. While the movie is easy to dismiss as a dystopian fantasy, Kagi reminded me that unplugging from the Matrix is, depressingly, not free. My data and I will have to keep feeding the machine that uses my data to enrich Google and other big companies until I can justify the $120/yr to unplug and get that clean user experience of vintage Google that you describe.