In the early days of the neterwebz most of your search results were pretty relevant if you used the correct terms. The world moves really quickly though - and I have been encountering a particular problem where my returned results are relevant...if I'm asking the question 8 years ago. Technology is the worst, but I've even come across medical information that is "woefully" out of date only 3 years later, but because they're being hosted on a more popular site they "become" the popular source, even if they're wrong. Not sure how you could accomplish that part...the next suggestion should be easier.
How about being able to blacklist some sites from your search results? There are forum farms out there that are useless for answering questions, yet because of the way they game the system they are returned high on most searches - find a way to kill those fuckers and you're off to a decent start.
I don't care if you have to set a cookie as long as I can see it and know what it contains. You don't need to know anything about me to know that I don't like bullshit websites
The Synergy Project is pretty supportive of donators, and those that donate are able to vote on what gets fixed/worked on next. It doesn't hurt that it's a fantastic project.
President George W. Bush, in 2002, ordered an urgent effort to field a homeland missile defense system within two years. In their rush to make that deadline, Missile Defense Agency officials latched onto exotic, unproven concepts without doing a rigorous analysis of their cost and feasibility. Members of Congress whose states and districts benefited from the spending tenaciously defended the programs, even after their deficiencies became evident.
We get the government we deserve. Until we stop electing candidates (from either party) who promise pork, we will continue to get pork, and waste, and a society that is steadily going bankrupt.
Yes, but other people are are largely stupid and completely insane.
The report, which took one full year into account, found that complaints against police have fallen 40.5 percent and use of “personal body” force by officers has been reduced by 46.5 percent. Use of pepper spray has decreased by 30.5 percent.
Two benefits can be seen immediately. First, the police are being harassed less from false complaints. Second, and more important, the police are finding ways to settle most disputes without the use of force, which means they are abusing their authority less.
These statistics do confirm what many on both the right and the left have begun to believe in recent years, that the police have been almost certainly using force against citizens inappropriately too often. In San Diego at least the cameras are serving to stem this misuse of authority.
There are two ways to write error-free programs; only the third one works.