• 3 Posts
  • 33 Comments
Joined 3 months ago
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Cake day: August 26th, 2024

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  • Have you tried Bing? I’ve been using Bing for over a decade now as my default search engine and while people give it crap, I’ve only had to go to Google a handful of times over this span of time and even then, I can’t remember a time that Google had what I was looking for either.

    Bing is customizable so you can get rid of some of the fluff that comes with searches that you don’t want that bloats your results. Like you can get rid of the colorful background, the trending news sections, the Copilot LLM results, etc.

    One plus that Bing Image search has had over Google for many years now is the ability to let you see the full screen image without doing any funky stuff. Like when you just want to load the jpg/png in the browser without the Google/Bing banner surrounding it…Bing Image search lets you do that with the click of a button. Google removed this feature years ago which was so shitty.

    It’s not perfect, not like old Google perfect, but that combined with an adblocker like uBlock Origin and my PiHole works for me to remove from sponsored results (not all, unfortunately).

    It has its own set of trackers too. I’m no fan of Microsoft and know this, but we’re at the bottom of the barrel with decent search engines anymore.

    I like Bing for the other perks like trending news, Bing Rewards (no joke, I have cashed in for over $400 worth of free stuff from a PC VR headset to fast food gift cards just from doing daily searches), and I use Copilot from time to time as a quick ChatGPT alternative (using ChatGPT, but doesn’t require an account to use so good for a quick Incognito session if needed) and also nice with the history under your account. I prefer to use Copilot in Bing than the Windows app since I don’t want that crap installed to my computer and would rather keep it to the browser.

    You may also check into extensions for whatever browser you end up going with. There are a few extensions that can help customize your search results like easily removing a website from the results, for example.




  • I don’t think so. Either that or it’s going to be pricey and not likely to work with a cell phone natively like how it is now with your wireless carrier.

    One of my pervious jobs used RingCentral which is what I had in mind with my comment. They do have an iPhone and Android app that can send and receive texts and calls, but it’s all strictly through their app. I suppose you could do a forward to your number, but you’re going to need to have an existing number for that which kind of defeats this purpose.

    You can manage call queues and the like on the backend in the browser to create something like this where it would send callers through a maze of menus to eventually be able to get to you.

    Additionally, you could program a key press to you that wouldn’t be made known to callers such as pressing 7 to immediately be “transferred” to you (something you’d only tell trusted callers calling you) but that’s not stated in the call queue prompt.

    I also imagine any business VoIP has a set minimum of numbers/users to sign up with them since they’re really for business, not personal use. But hey! Give it a shot and see or try one of their competitors.

    Kind of an interesting thing to think about since you mentioned it.


  • The VoIP services they subscribe to usually help with this to some degree in identifying common patterns to cut down on some of the spam.

    Beyond that, businesses implementing call queues & bot menus is what helps cut down on the rest of it.

    It’s becoming more rare to actually get in contact with a human from many businesses nowadays. Businesses seem to want users to use a bot that will help the customer do whatever it is they’re doing as much as possible.

    And the only way to get to said human is through a series of menus and questions, usually confirming they actually are a customer.

    Long gone are the days of calling and getting a human to give your information to.

    When you call something like Bank of America, they prove you are a customer because you give them your account number or they recognize that based on your caller ID and also have to still provide SSN or date of birth, so even if someone spoofs an actual customer’s number, they’re stuck in the menu and never reach a human.



  • I’ve tried adblocker apps and VPNs with adblockers too but YouTube ads find a way through and this happens even when on my home WiFi for my iPhone where my PiHole is.

    I’ve tried various lists in my PiHole and none seem to block ads. I only get to block ads on my computers with the uBlock Origin extension.

    I’ve read a lot of people say that PiHole cannot block ads from YouTube because of the way YouTube serves up ads which is on the same server as the video the user wants to play. While adblocker extensions in the browser work similarly to how YouTube Premium does, somehow.

    The most I got with PiHole was completely breaking all YouTube videos.

    If I could get my PiHole to block YouTube ads, I could create a VPN and have that blocker available on the go on my iPhone too. But it doesn’t seem possible at this time from what I’ve found.

    I’d love to find a way to make this to work though. It’s why I set up my PiHole to begin with but kept it up for the other features that have been useful.


  • It sounds like this is happening because your computer still has Chrome as the default browser. Assuming this is Windows: right-click one of the icons on the desktop, click Properties, then click Change and select Firefox.

    This will now set Firefox as the default browser for your computer and these icons should now automatically open in Firefox as well as any new ones you create.

    Creating an icon on the desktop is very similar in the process you would have done for Chrome too.

    The problem here is that you can’t create icons that are exclusive to Chrome or Firefox, as far as I know, since Windows chooses, by default, one app that will open these by default.

    Technically you could bypass this by right-clicking the desktop icon and then select “Open in” and then choose the other browser in case you need to open one in Chrome and the other in Firefox.