I would love if Kagi's AI/LLM search was more powerful: Rather than me just entering a prompt and Kagi deriving search terms for me, I want to be able to give Kagi a research objective to complete, where it takes a problem I'm trying to solve and performs many searches until it is confident it has found the right results for me, based on criteria I provided.
What happens today is that Kagi just runs a bunch of searches for me but it doesn't actually visit those sites to check whether they meet the requirements in the prompt. Search terms only get you so far, but an LLM can consume the content on a page and make much more thorough analysis of its content beyond what a search engine can. However, it's clear that this isn't working because I can see the search terms Kagi is using and it then comes up with results that very clearly don't fit my requirements. It often even comes up with invalid links that just return a 404 which would be impossible if Kagi actually visited the site on my request.
Example 1: I am working on a technical project and have some requirements I need to meet. However, there are multiple solutions and I want to understand the trade-offs for different options. This information is all out there, but rather than me reading through many websites, Kagi can find the solution for me. Here's the prompt I could use: "I am running a Kubernetes cluster and want to provide an S3-compatible storage solution to my users. The cluster is very small and only needs a lightweight solution that is able to provide just enough storage replication and uptime so that a single node outage can be tolerated temporarily. I want to keep both administrative and resource overhead minimal, while scalability is not a primary concern. Research available options and then for each, conduct searches across the internet to find which solution best suits my requirements. It is important that you find community reviews (for example reddit, blogs, github discussions or issues) that explore how to use these solutions in practice. At the end of your research summarise your findings and present me with a recommendation as well as other options, outlining the pros & cons of each solution. Link to sources for everything to ensure I can validate claims".
Example 2: I want to buy new hiking shoes but the internet is full of "listicles" and shops that want to sell their product. Example prompt: "I need new hiking shoes. Conduct a deep research of people actively using and reviewing hiking shoes for someone that doesn't need high end gear and just wants suitable low profile shoes for short single day hikes over relatively flat terrain, but that don't get soaking wet in the rain. Disregard sites that aggregate reviews from other sites or just link to products and provide pros & cons, focus on those actually use the shoes".