Note:
Anything I put in between these lines: | example | is exactly what you type. Quotation marks are key, as it is whether you leave a space between words and punctuation marks.
This works for Google as well as most other popular search engines.
Let's say you want to find articles about vitamin C and lysine as it relates to treating/clearing blockages in the arteries.
So you search: | Vitamin C and Lysine clears arteries |
You are likely to get lots of (useless?) results about vitamin C OR lysine OR clears OR arteries. Or some combination thereof.
Instead search: | "Vitamin C" "Lysine" "clears arteries" |
This will only show results that contain all three items put in quotations.
Whatever you put inside quotations, including spelling errors, will be searched.
So what if you get a bunch of bullshit that DOES have all three of those terms, but it's an article about how it's all "fake" or "unproven" or "fringe" etc...?
There is an antidote…
Search:
| "Vitamin C" "Lysine" "clears arteries" -fake -unproven -fringe |
Leave NO space between - and the word you want to exclude.
Next:
Let's say you want to search a specific website...
Search: | "Vitamin C" "Lysine" "clears arteries" site:greatawakening.win |
You can copy/paste & search the above to illustrate my next point below.
The above example will return NO results. But why?
I wrote an exhaustive article on this exact subject on GAW; why won't we get results?
Because the exact phrase "clears arteries" does not appear once in the 371,000 words I typed.
However, the next example DOES indeed return the post I wrote:
Search: | "Vitamin C" "Lysine" clears "arteries" site:greatawakening.win |
Quotations around clears removed.
This makes any word NOT in quotations optional, but not required to render a result.
The issue above is that it's easy to make your search too exact.
When searching in this advanced way, you will have to play with these parameters including alternate spellings i.e. Lysine vs L-lysine, etc...
You can also search between specific date ranges using the Google search options.
If you're using your phone, in this case iPhone, click the left-most side of the address bar and select "Request Desktop Site."
This will show more search options on Google.
Additionally, going to google(.)com and then clicking "request desktop site" and then go to image search and then clicking the little camera icon in the search bar will allow you to easily reverse-image search.
Most of you probably already knew this, but I hope this proves a useful tool to those that didn't.
Cheers!
WWG1WGA!
Edit: While useful in many search engines, it does not work in Rumble's search. That search is hopelessly fucked, prob on purpose.
But... you can use Google to search Rumble.
| anything useful site:Rumble.com |
Credit to u/Kunkussion
"To add:
After your search, put before:2019 with an extra space after your last word."
Speaking of L-lysine. Does brand matter? And Vit C, does brand matteR? Kek
Also, I read in your older post, someone said Liposomal Vitamin C is absorbed better than regular C. True/False?
Ok u/queue-anon I'm finally going to disclose the exact brand & type I buy but just because it's you.
"Solgar Vitamin C 500 mg, 250 Vegetable Capsules"
"Solgar L-Lysine 500 mg, 250 Vegetable Capsules"
I think it's clear to everyone by now that my post is for the people, not a particular brand.
If you want to name the brand & exact type the next time I post it, you have my blessing but I'm not gonna advocate any brand under that OP.
Optics.
I see Nestle bought Solgar. I only say that because I remember supplement forums noticed when Nestle bought Garden of Life multivitamin, they changed the formula.
The first time my father-in-law did the protocol he used the garden of life brand… Then it came out that they found heavy metals in their vitamin C supplements. Turns out it comes from China… At least that's what I read.
The formula for the brand I use now, at least of the ingredients they have disclosed on the bottle, don't seem to have changed.
I will add one thing though...
NEVER take any supplement that has titanium dioxide in the ingredients.
Can you recommend a good brand for VitC, B-12, Magnesium, and some others? I should know better than to just pick a brand and go with it.