- 20 days
Jeeves apparently was classier than that all the way until the end.
MoogleMaestro@lemmy.zipEnglish
20 daysI was thinking this as well. You would have thought they took the “Jeeves” as an agent name.
- Anaeijon@lemmy.dbzer0.comEnglish20 days
It’s harder to pronounce internationally, which makes it a weaker global brand.
Also, in the early days of wakeword detection, the detection algorythm actually triggered by the ‘melody’ your voice creates automatically when producing certain vocal sounds. This basically triggered a recording before going through deeper analysis to actually determine, if this was supposed to be an actual request.
For Alexa, the a-ex-a is easy to detect. For “Hey Siri” it’s basically a ‘chime bing bing’ sound in a certain rythm. For Cortana, it’s or-a-a. But Jeeves is only a single syllable, both the J and ‘vs’ are harder to pronounce and basically not relevant for wakeword detection. So the whole wakeword is basically just “eee”, which is a bad wakeword.
So… Just not gold, both technically for reliability and efficiency and economically, not so great for global brand recognition.
- jaybone@lemmy.zipEnglish20 days
I’m thinking Siri and Alexa are meant to be more modern, young and hip. Jeeves as a butler has this very old man vibe to it.
- 20 days
I WAS ABOUT TO SAY JUST THAT!!!
Are you s psychic?
Maki@lemmy.blahaj.zoneEnglish
20 daysIt’s good to see they never sold out to some AI chatbot nonsense. Shame to see it go.
- bassomitron@lemmy.worldEnglish20 days
It was a garbage search engine, but a memorable one from the early web nonetheless.
𝕸𝖔𝖘𝖘@infosec.pubEnglish
20 daysMy go-to was 37.com. It was a sad day when it closed down, like a decade ago.
- njordomir@lemmy.worldEnglish20 days
Yeah, I remember disliking it back in the day (Alta Vista gang!!!🅰️♈), but I wish they evolved and got better rather than shutting down and I am still sad to see it go.
lechekaflan@lemmy.worldEnglish
19 daysUsed to see about a few dozen, and now some of them like Yahoo and Excite survive mostly in Japan.
Have to note that Excite has a very interesting history, asides from its domain name bought by, of course, Ask.
- ChicoSuave@lemmy.worldEnglish20 days
PG Wodehouse would die again if he saw Jeeves become a digital effigy
- ChicoSuave@lemmy.worldEnglish20 days
It’s not about making money from his creation. He did that already. He would hate seeing Jeeves become a hollow shell of acquiescence instead of the cunning intermediary he was.
- jaybone@lemmy.zipEnglish20 days
And that’s when it becomes AI slop?
Not that Jeeves was a very good search engine to begin with. But it’s a good way to ruin nostalgia and disrespect the past.
- 20 days
Facedeer’s just trolling as usual.
The truth of the matter is: we’re at the peak of AI innovation and subsidies, and if any company could demonstrate profitability by incorporating a modern LLM, this would have been it. And they didn’t.
- 20 days
Your obsession with me is quite silly. I recommend you just block me already, then you won’t have to see my “trolling.”
- 20 days
Would you like to engage with everything else I said, or was your sole contribution to say “haha AI soon”
- 20 days
There was a time you asked Jeeves a question for the last time and never knew it 😔
𝕸𝖔𝖘𝖘@infosec.pubEnglish
20 daysI remember it. I asked it if Jeeves was gay, and he said that he prefers the term “jovial”. He was a treasure.
lyrial@anarchist.nexusEnglish
20 daysI went to the site about 5 years ago out of boredom to see if the old easter eggs were still there. iirc most of them still worked, but the “Is Jeeves well endowed?” Easter egg was removed.
- reddig33@lemmy.worldEnglish20 days
You’d think someone wasting money on AI would have snapped up this property. The brand is still a good fit for a chatbot.
- FrChazzz@lemmus.orgEnglish19 days
Especially if they had it answer you like it was the head butler on Downton Abbey or something!
- IphtashuFitz@lemmy.worldEnglish20 days
Here’s a bit of trivia (I worked for a startup that Ask Jeeves acquired back in 2000 & stayed on for a few more years):
There was a brief period of time where Ask Jeeves seriously considered getting into search for porn. They went so far as to design a French maid caricature named Mimi that was to parallel the Jeeves butler that was their brand back then. They even registered a bunch of domains like askmimi.com before finally deciding they didn’t want to risk damaging the Jeeves brand, and scratched the whole project.
Another bit of trivia: the CEO & executives at Jeeves when they acquired us were short-sighted idiots. One of the products my startup had developed was something we called “text ads” that let people bid on popular search terms for placement of ads along with the search results we served up. It was a fully automated system that required virtually no interaction on our part, and we considered it a license to print money. It brought in a good amount of revenue for us. After Jeeves acquired us they shut our text ads down and sold the service off to another small company. The Jeeves CEO at the time infamously said “we’re in the question answering business, not the advertising business” when this was sold off.
The company that bought it made some improvements to it then re-launched it as Google AdWords, and Google quickly eclipsed Jeeves after that.
- 20 days
After Jeeves acquired us they shut our text ads down and sold the service off to another small company. The Jeeves CEO at the time infamously said “we’re in the question answering business, not the advertising business” when this was sold off.
Wow. They really did die the hero instead of living long enough to become the villain.
They may be idiots, but they’re respectable idiots.
- limer@lemmy.mlEnglish19 days
I imagine even if they tried to make a run with the ads, different people who were sociopathic would have still gained the monopoly.
The building of that monopoly required criminal minds
- BeN9o@lemmy.worldEnglish20 days
I didn’t even realise Jeeves was still around! I remember using it in school before google existed.
- magnue@lemmy.worldEnglish19 days
It was in the top 10 most visited websites for a surprisingly long time.
- BigDanishGuy@sh.itjust.worksEnglish19 days
*pleasantly surprised.
Ask Jeeves was a remnant from a bygone time of static html 4.0 pages, <blink> tags, and view counters. It was a simpler time, perhaps even a better time. But I’m glad this memory didn’t have to get tarnished, with the mid 2020s tech du jour.
- BarneyPiccolo@lemmy.todayEnglish19 days
I used a Visitor Counter to beat a business rival who had stolen my business (long story, but he was a crook). Since it was a small town, and this guy was well connected, with a brother on the police force, so I got nowhere with real justice. This was this guy’s business model - invest in a business, then steal it.
So I told my story on my web page, and put a hit counter at the bottom. First, he threatened to sue me, and I told him to bring it on, I had written documentation and many live witnesses who would verify every statement I made.
The page went locally viral, and people all over town told me they read the page. As the hit counter imcreased, his business decreased. He got increasingly desperate as his business crashed, begged me to take it down, which I refused, and eventually he closed the business.
I re-branded under another name, and continue to operate that business to this day.
A_Random_Idiot@lemmy.worldEnglish
20 daysI didnt realize ask.com was still around.
Iremember when it launched… another relic of the old internet.
- mechoman444@lemmy.worldEnglish19 days
This is probably the first time I typed that url to go to that website since the 90s.
What a surreal feeling.
- 20 days
Use our new shiny Ask AI agent! Trained on double the stolen training data!
- Sam_Bass@lemmy.worldEnglish20 days
Just as soon not, as any connection to it will be tracked and forwarded to ice and homeland security
- jaybone@lemmy.zipEnglish20 days
I’ve been asking myself that for like ten years now, since all the big search engines are just ad spam paid SEO and now AI bullshit.
- morto@piefed.socialEnglish20 days
I have an idea. What if we make web pages with several links of useful sites, like a catalog?

















