I know that there have been blog post about setting up an htpc using uuntu as the os.
The Australia section is automatically on as it detect where I am. I expect that where I search for things, it prioritises results from Australia. For example if I am look at tax information, Latvia's taxation law will not help me.
Do these marks (- for exclusion, + for mandatory) still work on search engines? I thought they stopped entertaining them years ago, exactly because they don't want the user to mess with SEO results.
I know from personal experience that double quotes (to search for an exact expression) are ignored.
Not sure what your hardware looks like but I set up a degoogled RPI running on linageos 22. Been running solid for about 6 months now. Definitely not a beginner project, took me a bit of work to get it up and running but hasn't failed me yet!
Unpopular opinion incoming: as much as i hate it... LLM is better than search engines for finding information. It's not always correct but neither are web results.
It is more that these web pages are probably all LLM written, and so they poison the search results. Not so much LLM search results/helpers at the top of a results page.
That could be part of the issue. I recently had an issue with my raid setup through mdadm on Linux and couldn't figure out how to restore it. Forums didn't help and none of the commands I tried got the raid to go back together. I queried GPT and had it rebuilding within 10 min.
For anyone wondering, the trick was to force a rebuild and assume clean one of the drives then add my mirror for it to rebuild/copy.