I second this. Don't get me wrong, I applaud the concept and the effort, but this implementation isn't quite there.
I searched for "document management system comparison" since I am currently in the process of selecting one for our legal team at work. Some on-the-ground reports from real users would be hugely valuable. But this is the classic example of where Google utterly fails; document management is a 100 billion industry and there are absolutely no search results which are not SEO, marketing copy, or astroturfed listicles with nearly zero value.
Unfortunately, this website returned even less relevant results. Not a single result pertained to document management at all; instead it returned random matches on words like "system" and "management."
Whoever solves this problem could definitely unseat Google as the go-to search engine for most people. So it's a big prize. But it's also a super hard socio-technical problem, requiring incredibly sophisticated and powerful tech in a highly adversarial environment. However, regrettably, it looks like this attempt hasn't even got the basic search tech down.
- The noncommercial filter gave a few more good results, but it seems like there is not much 'good' content written on this topic
I would definetely not call all Kagi results fantastic, but it does seem to be better than Google. We are trying hard to solve the problem of the nonsense on the web (Kagi founder here).
Is a comparison of document management systems something you expect actually find, as something written by humans? I wouldn't write such an article, I don't know who would.
The only people who seem to be writing these types of comparison articles are spammers.
I typed this reply without checking, but I checked now, and yeah -- if you google "document management system comparison", you get ads for document management systems, and search engine spam. That's hardly helpful.
I searched for "document management system comparison" since I am currently in the process of selecting one for our legal team at work. Some on-the-ground reports from real users would be hugely valuable. But this is the classic example of where Google utterly fails; document management is a 100 billion industry and there are absolutely no search results which are not SEO, marketing copy, or astroturfed listicles with nearly zero value.
Unfortunately, this website returned even less relevant results. Not a single result pertained to document management at all; instead it returned random matches on words like "system" and "management."
Whoever solves this problem could definitely unseat Google as the go-to search engine for most people. So it's a big prize. But it's also a super hard socio-technical problem, requiring incredibly sophisticated and powerful tech in a highly adversarial environment. However, regrettably, it looks like this attempt hasn't even got the basic search tech down.