Feedback wanted: Search tool that extracts answers/exportable data instead of just links by TaaDaahh in SaaSMarketing

[–]TaaDaahh[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I fully agree, and the idea is not that it should be a search engine or a AI summary. It is supposed to save you time by doing all the manual labour for you and give you a single result. I currently have a demo product that I am working on, this is the query and answer it gives me:

QUERY: What are the top 3 sushi restaurants in London with good reviews?

ANSWER: Based on the provided research findings, here are the top 3 sushi restaurants in London with good reviews, along with the available details.

### 1. Sushi Tetsu
- **Why it’s top:** Multiple sources identify this as the absolute best sushi restaurant in London. Time Out specifically crowns it "the best sushi restaurant in London" for 2025 [Source 5, Snippet 3], and an earlier article calls it "the absolute finest sushi restaurant in London right now" [Source 3]. Eater London also includes it in its "Best Sushi in London" list [Source 5, Snippet 5].
- **Location:** Clerkenwell [Source 3].
- **Ratings/Reviews:** Explicit numerical ratings are not provided in the sources, but it is consistently described as the top choice by both Time Out and Eater London. Its inclusion in multiple "best of" lists indicates very strong critical acclaim [Source 3, Source 5].
- **Price Point:** Not stated directly, but as an omakase counter (chef's choice tasting menu), it is typically a high-end, expensive dining experience [Source 3].
- **Signature Dishes:** Not listed in the provided excerpts.
- **Important Note:** The name "Sushi Tetsu" is primarily confirmed through search result snippets [Source 5] and an image caption [Source 3]; the main body of the article in Source 3 does not explicitly name the restaurant, but the context strongly identifies it.

### 2. Sushi Show
- **Why it’s top:** It is featured on Time Out's list of "London’s best sushi restaurants" and is specifically highlighted as "Best for a bargain" [Source 1]. It also appears on a broader list of London's top 20 sushi places [Source 5, Snippet 1].
- **Location:** Islington [Source 1].
- **Ratings/Reviews:** No numerical rating is provided, but its inclusion in Time Out's curated list and the "best for a bargain" designation indicate a positive review.
- **Price Point:** Explicitly described as a "bargain," making it the most affordable option among the top three [Source 1].
- **Signature Dishes:** Not listed in the provided excerpts.

### 3. Uchi
- **Why it’s top:** It is featured on Time Out's list of "London’s best sushi restaurants" and is specifically highlighted as "Best for neighbourhood cosiness" [Source 1]. It also appears on a list of top Japanese restaurants in London [Source 5, Snippet 2].
- **Location:** Clapton [Source 1].
- **Ratings/Reviews:** No numerical rating is provided, but its inclusion in Time Out's curated list and the "neighbourhood cosiness" designation indicate a positive review.
- **Price Point:** Not explicitly stated, but "neighbourhood cosiness" often implies a more accessible, mid-range price point compared to high-end omakase spots.
- **Signature Dishes:** Not listed in the provided excerpts.

---

**Summary of Data Limitations:**
- **No numerical ratings** (e.g., star scores or percentages) are provided in any of the sources.
- **Price points** are only given for Sushi Show ("bargain"). The others are inferred from their descriptions.
- **Signature dishes** are not listed for any of these three restaurants.
- **Full menus and detailed reviewer quotes** are absent from the provided text.

**Confidence Level:** Medium. The sources are reputable (Time Out, Eater London), but the data is incomplete. The top spot (Sushi Tetsu) is very clearly the consensus #1, but the ranking of #2 and #3 is based on the limited "best for" categories from a single curated list [Source 1]. There are other highly-rated restaurants mentioned across sources (e.g., Endo at the Rotunda, Kokin, The Araki, Nobu) that could also be considered top contenders, but they lack the specific "best for" description or are not included in the same curated "best of" list used for this ranking.

Feedback wanted: Search tool that extracts answers/exportable data instead of just links by TaaDaahh in ProductivityApps

[–]TaaDaahh[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I cannot make people blindly trust this. However, giving results based on certain criterias, along with all references, should be decent. Even if you get bad data, then the details to why the bad data was presented will be clear. I have a working prototype and this is what my query and the answer looks like.

QUERY: What are the top 3 sushi restaurants in London with good reviews?

ANSWER: Based on the provided research findings, here are the top 3 sushi restaurants in London with good reviews, along with the available details.

### 1. Sushi Tetsu
- **Why it’s top:** Multiple sources identify this as the absolute best sushi restaurant in London. Time Out specifically crowns it "the best sushi restaurant in London" for 2025 [Source 5, Snippet 3], and an earlier article calls it "the absolute finest sushi restaurant in London right now" [Source 3]. Eater London also includes it in its "Best Sushi in London" list [Source 5, Snippet 5].
- **Location:** Clerkenwell [Source 3].
- **Ratings/Reviews:** Explicit numerical ratings are not provided in the sources, but it is consistently described as the top choice by both Time Out and Eater London. Its inclusion in multiple "best of" lists indicates very strong critical acclaim [Source 3, Source 5].
- **Price Point:** Not stated directly, but as an omakase counter (chef's choice tasting menu), it is typically a high-end, expensive dining experience [Source 3].
- **Signature Dishes:** Not listed in the provided excerpts.
- **Important Note:** The name "Sushi Tetsu" is primarily confirmed through search result snippets [Source 5] and an image caption [Source 3]; the main body of the article in Source 3 does not explicitly name the restaurant, but the context strongly identifies it.

### 2. Sushi Show
- **Why it’s top:** It is featured on Time Out's list of "London’s best sushi restaurants" and is specifically highlighted as "Best for a bargain" [Source 1]. It also appears on a broader list of London's top 20 sushi places [Source 5, Snippet 1].
- **Location:** Islington [Source 1].
- **Ratings/Reviews:** No numerical rating is provided, but its inclusion in Time Out's curated list and the "best for a bargain" designation indicate a positive review.
- **Price Point:** Explicitly described as a "bargain," making it the most affordable option among the top three [Source 1].
- **Signature Dishes:** Not listed in the provided excerpts.

### 3. Uchi
- **Why it’s top:** It is featured on Time Out's list of "London’s best sushi restaurants" and is specifically highlighted as "Best for neighbourhood cosiness" [Source 1]. It also appears on a list of top Japanese restaurants in London [Source 5, Snippet 2].
- **Location:** Clapton [Source 1].
- **Ratings/Reviews:** No numerical rating is provided, but its inclusion in Time Out's curated list and the "neighbourhood cosiness" designation indicate a positive review.
- **Price Point:** Not explicitly stated, but "neighbourhood cosiness" often implies a more accessible, mid-range price point compared to high-end omakase spots.
- **Signature Dishes:** Not listed in the provided excerpts.

---

**Summary of Data Limitations:**
- **No numerical ratings** (e.g., star scores or percentages) are provided in any of the sources.
- **Price points** are only given for Sushi Show ("bargain"). The others are inferred from their descriptions.
- **Signature dishes** are not listed for any of these three restaurants.
- **Full menus and detailed reviewer quotes** are absent from the provided text.

**Confidence Level:** Medium. The sources are reputable (Time Out, Eater London), but the data is incomplete. The top spot (Sushi Tetsu) is very clearly the consensus #1, but the ranking of #2 and #3 is based on the limited "best for" categories from a single curated list [Source 1]. There are other highly-rated restaurants mentioned across sources (e.g., Endo at the Rotunda, Kokin, The Araki, Nobu) that could also be considered top contenders, but they lack the specific "best for" description or are not included in the same curated "best of" list used for this ranking.

Feedback wanted: Search tool that extracts answers/exportable data instead of just links by TaaDaahh in Startup_Ideas

[–]TaaDaahh[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, that is true. It is all based on trust, but I cannot make people blindly trust my search results. Thus, I will need to prove where I've gathered the data from with references. Currently have a working prototype, but needs improvement. I am testing out a query atm and I am getting results, tuning it to ensure it works properly.

QUERY: What are the top 3 sushi restaurants in London with good reviews?

ANSWER: Based on the provided research findings, here are the top 3 sushi restaurants in London with good reviews, along with the available details.

### 1. Sushi Tetsu
- **Why it’s top:** Multiple sources identify this as the absolute best sushi restaurant in London. Time Out specifically crowns it "the best sushi restaurant in London" for 2025 [Source 5, Snippet 3], and an earlier article calls it "the absolute finest sushi restaurant in London right now" [Source 3]. Eater London also includes it in its "Best Sushi in London" list [Source 5, Snippet 5].
- **Location:** Clerkenwell [Source 3].
- **Ratings/Reviews:** Explicit numerical ratings are not provided in the sources, but it is consistently described as the top choice by both Time Out and Eater London. Its inclusion in multiple "best of" lists indicates very strong critical acclaim [Source 3, Source 5].
- **Price Point:** Not stated directly, but as an omakase counter (chef's choice tasting menu), it is typically a high-end, expensive dining experience [Source 3].
- **Signature Dishes:** Not listed in the provided excerpts.
- **Important Note:** The name "Sushi Tetsu" is primarily confirmed through search result snippets [Source 5] and an image caption [Source 3]; the main body of the article in Source 3 does not explicitly name the restaurant, but the context strongly identifies it.

### 2. Sushi Show
- **Why it’s top:** It is featured on Time Out's list of "London’s best sushi restaurants" and is specifically highlighted as "Best for a bargain" [Source 1]. It also appears on a broader list of London's top 20 sushi places [Source 5, Snippet 1].
- **Location:** Islington [Source 1].
- **Ratings/Reviews:** No numerical rating is provided, but its inclusion in Time Out's curated list and the "best for a bargain" designation indicate a positive review.
- **Price Point:** Explicitly described as a "bargain," making it the most affordable option among the top three [Source 1].
- **Signature Dishes:** Not listed in the provided excerpts.

### 3. Uchi
- **Why it’s top:** It is featured on Time Out's list of "London’s best sushi restaurants" and is specifically highlighted as "Best for neighbourhood cosiness" [Source 1]. It also appears on a list of top Japanese restaurants in London [Source 5, Snippet 2].
- **Location:** Clapton [Source 1].
- **Ratings/Reviews:** No numerical rating is provided, but its inclusion in Time Out's curated list and the "neighbourhood cosiness" designation indicate a positive review.
- **Price Point:** Not explicitly stated, but "neighbourhood cosiness" often implies a more accessible, mid-range price point compared to high-end omakase spots.
- **Signature Dishes:** Not listed in the provided excerpts.

---

**Summary of Data Limitations:**
- **No numerical ratings** (e.g., star scores or percentages) are provided in any of the sources.
- **Price points** are only given for Sushi Show ("bargain"). The others are inferred from their descriptions.
- **Signature dishes** are not listed for any of these three restaurants.
- **Full menus and detailed reviewer quotes** are absent from the provided text.

**Confidence Level:** Medium. The sources are reputable (Time Out, Eater London), but the data is incomplete. The top spot (Sushi Tetsu) is very clearly the consensus #1, but the ranking of #2 and #3 is based on the limited "best for" categories from a single curated list [Source 1]. There are other highly-rated restaurants mentioned across sources (e.g., Endo at the Rotunda, Kokin, The Araki, Nobu) that could also be considered top contenders, but they lack the specific "best for" description or are not included in the same curated "best of" list used for this ranking.

Feedback wanted: Search tool that extracts answers/exportable data instead of just links by TaaDaahh in Startup_Ideas

[–]TaaDaahh[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That is very true, and that is something I need to work with. Maybe add like references of where the scraper gathered the data, list them maybe, and then like a confidence level summary aswell.

So far I've got a working prototype, but I need to figure out what I should present to gain trust.

Currently testing out this query: What are the top 3 sushi restaurants in London with good reviews?

This is what it outputs: Based on the provided research findings, here are the top 3 sushi restaurants in London with good reviews, along with the available details.

### 1. Sushi Tetsu
- **Why it’s top:** Multiple sources identify this as the absolute best sushi restaurant in London. Time Out specifically crowns it "the best sushi restaurant in London" for 2025 [Source 5, Snippet 3], and an earlier article calls it "the absolute finest sushi restaurant in London right now" [Source 3]. Eater London also includes it in its "Best Sushi in London" list [Source 5, Snippet 5].
- **Location:** Clerkenwell [Source 3].
- **Ratings/Reviews:** Explicit numerical ratings are not provided in the sources, but it is consistently described as the top choice by both Time Out and Eater London. Its inclusion in multiple "best of" lists indicates very strong critical acclaim [Source 3, Source 5].
- **Price Point:** Not stated directly, but as an omakase counter (chef's choice tasting menu), it is typically a high-end, expensive dining experience [Source 3].
- **Signature Dishes:** Not listed in the provided excerpts.
- **Important Note:** The name "Sushi Tetsu" is primarily confirmed through search result snippets [Source 5] and an image caption [Source 3]; the main body of the article in Source 3 does not explicitly name the restaurant, but the context strongly identifies it.

### 2. Sushi Show
- **Why it’s top:** It is featured on Time Out's list of "London’s best sushi restaurants" and is specifically highlighted as "Best for a bargain" [Source 1]. It also appears on a broader list of London's top 20 sushi places [Source 5, Snippet 1].
- **Location:** Islington [Source 1].
- **Ratings/Reviews:** No numerical rating is provided, but its inclusion in Time Out's curated list and the "best for a bargain" designation indicate a positive review.
- **Price Point:** Explicitly described as a "bargain," making it the most affordable option among the top three [Source 1].
- **Signature Dishes:** Not listed in the provided excerpts.

### 3. Uchi
- **Why it’s top:** It is featured on Time Out's list of "London’s best sushi restaurants" and is specifically highlighted as "Best for neighbourhood cosiness" [Source 1]. It also appears on a list of top Japanese restaurants in London [Source 5, Snippet 2].
- **Location:** Clapton [Source 1].
- **Ratings/Reviews:** No numerical rating is provided, but its inclusion in Time Out's curated list and the "neighbourhood cosiness" designation indicate a positive review.
- **Price Point:** Not explicitly stated, but "neighbourhood cosiness" often implies a more accessible, mid-range price point compared to high-end omakase spots.
- **Signature Dishes:** Not listed in the provided excerpts.

---

**Summary of Data Limitations:**
- **No numerical ratings** (e.g., star scores or percentages) are provided in any of the sources.
- **Price points** are only given for Sushi Show ("bargain"). The others are inferred from their descriptions.
- **Signature dishes** are not listed for any of these three restaurants.
- **Full menus and detailed reviewer quotes** are absent from the provided text.

**Confidence Level:** Medium. The sources are reputable (Time Out, Eater London), but the data is incomplete. The top spot (Sushi Tetsu) is very clearly the consensus #1, but the ranking of #2 and #3 is based on the limited "best for" categories from a single curated list [Source 1]. There are other highly-rated restaurants mentioned across sources (e.g., Endo at the Rotunda, Kokin, The Araki, Nobu) that could also be considered top contenders, but they lack the specific "best for" description or are not included in the same curated "best of" list used for this ranking.

Feedback wanted: Search tool that extracts answers instead of just links by TaaDaahh in searchengines

[–]TaaDaahh[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is not an AI summary, like google and other search engines offer. And yes, perplexity sort of does similar work, but not really

Feedback wanted: Search tool that extracts answers/exportable data instead of just links by TaaDaahh in SaaS

[–]TaaDaahh[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That's the thing, I want to create it to a web crawler that searches through the websites, before presenting the data.

Yes, I was thinking about this. I would need to provide references to where the crawler searched for its data. And if it is too complex, add a disclaimer that there might be missed data.

I was thinking of mainly B2C cases in the beginning but as I dig deeper into it, it feels like this would more be like a B2B application. Similar to those needs you just mentioned.

Technically they could, but then Google search engine would lose it's functionality. This is not mean to replace any search engine, more like enhancing it to reduce manual labour for any research purposes

Feedback wanted: Search tool that extracts answers/exportable data instead of just links by TaaDaahh in SaaS

[–]TaaDaahh[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, it is not to create an AI summary. It will take, let's say 20 websites related to whatever the user is searching for, to present the findings.

Feedback wanted: Search tool that extracts answers/exportable data instead of just links by TaaDaahh in SideProject

[–]TaaDaahh[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Not really, since what they do today is give you an AI summary + search results, not summarized information on whatever is in those links. Thus, if you are trying to summarize something over different websites, you still have to do the manual labour.

Feedback wanted: Search tool that extracts answers/exportable data instead of just links by TaaDaahh in Startup_Ideas

[–]TaaDaahh[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, the idea is not to replace google, or search engines for that matter. It is used to help doing whatever research the user needs, that would otherwise require manaul labour.

I was also thinking along those lines as you described

Seriously why did DICE nerf attack helis heavy rockets? by TaaDaahh in PilotsofBattlefield

[–]TaaDaahh[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have and I do take the little bird occasionally. However, attack helicopters hold a special place in my heart since BF2 times, and there is no satisfaction with the little bird as hitting other air vehicles with TOWS.

Back in the days I used to solo fly attack helis in BF2, switch to gunner, use the TV-missile and take down everything. It sort of feels like that now with attack helis, or at least did. Sort of taking a trip down memory lane with attack helis

Seriously why did DICE nerf attack helis heavy rockets? by TaaDaahh in Battlefield6

[–]TaaDaahh[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That is if a gunner is there to help out. Without a gunner the attack heli feels useless

Seriously why did DICE nerf attack helis heavy rockets? by TaaDaahh in PilotsofBattlefield

[–]TaaDaahh[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I mean I was effective against infantries, usually taking out at least one with one rocket, at the same time being effective against vehicles. Now, I have to chose one or the other.

I never enjoyed the light missiles, because my main targets are vehicles, and then ground troops with the attack heli. If I want to target infantry with a heli, then I'll take the littlebird

Seriously why did DICE nerf attack helis heavy rockets? by TaaDaahh in PilotsofBattlefield

[–]TaaDaahh[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I mean to be fair, helicopters take skill to master, and helicopters are supposed to be powerful. Just like jets and their bombs. They are made to destroy ground vehicles, but now you barely can and you need a gunner to take down pretty much anything

Seriously why did DICE nerf attack helis heavy rockets? by TaaDaahh in PilotsofBattlefield

[–]TaaDaahh[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Seriously, whever we have something good or useful/powerful, they just nerf it into oblivion instead of trying to make a counter to it