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  2. DuckDuckGo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DuckDuckGo

    DuckDuckGo is a privacy-focused search engine founded by Gabriel Weinberg in 2008. It offers various products, such as browser extensions, a custom browser, and a domain name service, and is available worldwide except for Indonesia.

  3. List of search engines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_search_engines

    A comprehensive and updated list of various types of search engines, including web search engines, metasearch engines, desktop search tools, and web portals. The list covers different content topics, geographic regions, data types, and source codes.

  4. Elasticsearch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elasticsearch

    Elasticsearch is a distributed, multitenant-capable full-text search engine with an HTTP web interface and schema-free JSON documents. It is developed in Java and is triple-licensed under different open-source and proprietary licenses, and is part of the Elastic Stack with Logstash, Kibana and Beats.

  5. Gigablast - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gigablast

    Gigablast was an American free and open-source web search engine and directory, founded in 2000 by Matt Wells. It went offline in April 2023 without any official statement, after indexing over 12 billion web pages and providing results to various companies.

  6. Apache Lucene - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apache_Lucene

    Apache Lucene is a free and open-source search engine software library, written in Java and supported by the Apache Software Foundation. It is widely used as a foundation for production search applications and has many extensions and projects, such as Apache Solr, Elasticsearch and MongoDB Atlas Search.

  7. Apache Solr - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apache_Solr

    Apache Solr is a Java-based enterprise search engine that runs as a standalone server and supports distributed search and index replication. It has features such as full-text search, faceted search, real-time indexing, database integration, and rich document handling.

  8. Google Code Search - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Google_Code_Search

    The code available for searching was in various formats including tar.gz, .tar.bz2, .tar, and .zip, CVS, Subversion, git and Mercurial repositories. Google Code Search covered many open-source projects, and as such is different from the "Code Search for Google Open source projects" that was released afterwards. [1] [2]

  9. Krugle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Krugle

    Krugle is a search engine that allows computer programmers and other developers to search open source repositories to locate open source code, and quickly share the code with other programmers on the internet.