I pay for Kagi. I log in once and forget about it. Adding a new device is easy with a password manager.
google keeps its 0.0.0.0 pole position in my search engine array
But I suspect it'll always be a niche product, since most people don't see search engines as something worth paying for, even if the product does offer some stuff they might find useful. It's like selling a web browser or code editor or source control system in 2023, sure you might potentially have a small audience of die hard techies that could make use of it, but the majority of people will stick to the free but worse quality one simply due to the price alone.
When I'm looking into a specific topic, learning new features, or troubleshooting an issue, I put the results that Kagi provides in a separate window. I then work through this as a reliable to-do list for further investigation.
[1] https://help.kagi.com/kagi/features/lenses.html
[2] https://help.kagi.com/kagi/features/website-info-personalize...
You have a few options. You can log into each new device and save your session like a normal person. It takes only as long as required to physically enter the password.
You also have a "magic URL", which is just an OAuth token.
My phone has a search widget that doesn't support authenticated search engines, so I set up a custom engine and pointed it at my magic URL.
If you somehow really care about the two seconds it takes to log in, you could host a webpage that redirects to your magic URL. Then you and everyone else can use your Kagi account 'unauthenticated'
> why should I go through setting up all this settings to make a simple search query when I can simply use google without an account?
Why are you asking people to give you a reason? You are free to do as you please, the choice is yours.
It's really comfortable and easy to use for my desktop use case.
What makes me wobble about Kagi is about advertising on here with anonymized aggregated stats. He promises in the privacy policy to never share data (I'm paraphrasing, it's not exacty this wording) and then advertises with it.
It's not the advertising that bothers me, it just feels so needless to provide a sense of 'privacy comfort' and then provide a sense of 'wait you're gonna air my (anon) dirty laundry?'
Again not a big deal, but if he breaks his own rules (or suggests at it)... then he's not really committed and nor am I.
I know it's a small thing. I wouldn't mind 5yrs ago, but as everyone is so antsy about people playing by 'the rules' and constantly providing updates to software that doesn't need it, locking a relationship into place I didn't ask for... then the little things start to matter.
Otherwise, two thumbs up for Kagi. I personally give zero fucks about Google's business model, but Google's search experience is in my opinion degrading very rapidly.