• Fizz@lemmy.nz
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    4 hours ago

    This was the recommended search engine when I was at school. They pushed ask Jeeves so hard in the computer class. I dont think i used it at home though, I might have been on yahoo search due to a sketchy toolbar my mum installed.

  • IphtashuFitz@lemmy.world
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    15 hours ago

    Fun fact: Back in the early 2000’s Ask Jeeves seriously considered getting into adult/porn searches. They went so far as to create a companion character to the Jeeves butler that was their brand back then. It was a blonde in a skimpy French maid outfit that they called Mimi, and they even went so far as to register domains like askmimi.com and asksex.com before they scrapped the whole project.

    Source: I worked for them for a good part of the 2000’s.

    • ByteJunk@lemmy.world
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      12 hours ago

      That sounds like a fun time to have been part of the tech universe, I presume it was the bounce back from the dotcom boom.

      • IphtashuFitz@lemmy.world
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        11 hours ago

        It happened at the height of the boom. Ask Jeeves bought our company for over $500 million. As part of the acquisition I and many others were awarded with a hefty pile of stock options, but those options were locked up for a year or so in order to encourage us to stay at the new company. On paper, at the time of the acquisition, my stock options were worth well over $1 million, and the stock price of Jeeves was somewhere around $110.

        By the time I could exercise my stock options a year later they were worth under $10,000 and the company stock price was under $1. We were lucky to survive the bubble burst…

        Prior to all that it was pretty amazing. Our startup had a game room with pinball, pool, ping pong, etc. and we’d regularly have major discussions while playing a game. The company also bought us lunch every Friday for the better part of two years. And we had a really amazing team of engineers & leaders running the place. I’ve kept in touch with a number of those folks over the years, and have a number of those connections to thank for more than one job I’ve held after that one.

        • The Picard Maneuver@piefed.worldOP
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          14 hours ago

          I haven’t used it, but my understanding is that it’s just an animated character for interacting with the Grok AI, except it’s flirty and has “relationship building” mechanics… Probably not the little animal guy though, I hope.

          • LousyCornMuffins@lemmy.world
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            10 hours ago

            Like, what, you level up with it like a dating sim? I’m creeped out already, just the only things I can think of that melonball would do are even creepier.

            • The Picard Maneuver@piefed.worldOP
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              10 hours ago

              I’m not quite sure how structured it is or how far it goes, but I read that the romance-able ones will at least get more affectionate and change into skimpier clothes. It sounds ridiculous, but I think this is just the beginning of this type of stuff. I remember seeing a clip of a man who had “fallen in love with” and “proposed” to his chatGPT girlfriend.

              There are also already dedicated subreddits where people are building “boyfriends/girlfriends” with LLMs and getting attached.

    • Javi@feddit.uk
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      14 hours ago

      I wonder if they’d still be around had they pivoted to the internet’s true purpose.

      • IphtashuFitz@lemmy.world
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        14 hours ago

        No. Their leaders at the time weren’t that smart.

        I actually worked for a startup that they acquired in January of 2000. As a search startup we had developed a relatively basic text-based advertising system that let folks bid on search terms and get their ads displayed on the search results pages. It was almost 100% automated and we referred to it internally as something that generated “free money” for us.

        The executives at Jeeves sold that cash cow off when they acquired us. They said “we’re not in the advertising business”. In October of that same year the company we sold it to relaunched it as Google AdWords.

    • sp3ctr4l@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      14 hours ago

      That’s amazing, I wish we got that timeline, ahahah!

      Oh, sure, yes, we’re all friends with Tom… but are you friends with Mimi? All you gotta do is ask =P

  • Destide@feddit.uk
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    17 hours ago

    Lycos has lived longer than 6 generations of dogs. Why did I make myself sad?

  • Mose13@lemmy.world
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    16 hours ago

    Pretend I’m too young to know what this is. What is this? I’m assuming predecessor to Google?

    • yucandu@lemmy.world
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      16 hours ago

      In the early days of search engines, people learned all the tricks like + signs and “quotation marks” and then this site was like “what if we just let people ask questions in human readable english?” and it worked about as well as you’d expect such a product from 2001.

      • bamboo@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        15 hours ago

        The one thing I remember from that time was they had a section on the homepage of Ask Jeeves with recent searches from other users, and there was basically no filter to hide people’s searches for porn.

    • forrgott@lemmy.sdf.org
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      16 hours ago

      I never really used the sure much myself, but if I recall correctly their while schtick was that you could just write out a question in plain English to search the web, as opposed to AltaVista and early days of Google where you would want to do a keyword search instead to get good results.

      But, then again, I never really used it so I could be misremembering things…

      ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

    • jaybone@lemmy.zip
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      14 hours ago

      I don’t think predecessor. I think Google was already around. But it tried to be a competing search engine. And it sucked.

  • grte@lemmy.ca
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    17 hours ago

    You actually don’t. Askjeeves.com is still there. Is it the same service run by the same people? I have no idea. But you can roll around in nostalgia all you like.