Searches, we get searches™

searchesAll searches personally inspected for your safety and convenience.

Rubik salutation (MSN)

“Greetings, dorkmeister!”

brain disease when eyes are closed black and white morphing and dancing symptoms are seen ? (AOL)

Survey says…Darwinism!

designer graphic grocery flyer (Yahoo)

Using both the words “designer” and “graphic” very, very loosely.

perversity in Shane Alan Ladd (Google)

Don’t you hate how when you rent that tape it’s always stopped at the same place?

“waikiki”+”couch”+”balcony”+”photo” (Yahoo)

“overly” + “specific” + “mathematics” + “punctuation” = “nutjob”

blog dating schadenfreude improv (Google)

When reality TV and performance art collide.

freakily addictive games for ALL ages (Google)

Geek family values.

schwag hippy fest fans (Yahoo)

“My loft-mates went to Burning Man and all I got was this lousy t-shirt.”

coastal girl wearing skin tight mini dress pantyhose heels down on ground feeling kryp (AOL)

We’re sorry. Your search returned no results. Did you mean “Chip”?

Photo Albums Pituitary Tumors (MSN)

I smell a new Flickr group…

xxx
c

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One Comment, Comment or Ping

  1. ck

    PEDANTIC GEEKY NOTE

    Actually, the “mathematics” and the “punctuation” are a perfectly legitimate, if somewhat antiquated, form of search. More or less.

    Putting + in a search means “and” - i.e. find pages that contain ALL of these words (rather than just some of them). This sort of search was more common before Google raised the bar for making search engines more intuitive; in the days when Yahoo was “it,” searches using + were pretty common.

    Quotation marks are used to try to find exact phrases -

    “brown galoshes”

    is a more specific search than

    brown galoshes

    It’s particularly useful if you’re searching for lyrics and you have no clue who sang the song or what it’s called, but you can recall that there’s a lyric that goes “someday when your head is much lighter.”

    Said person who did the wakiki couch search seems not to quite understand the use of quotation marks (hence using them around single words), but does understand the use of the + sign in a search-engine search.

    And who doesn’t need a picture of a couch on a balcony in waikiki? Sounds pretty soothing to me. I can feel myself relaxing just thinking about it…



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