Not long ago, I looked up a recipe in fr*nch. Surprisingly, it was just a 1-paragraph description, and then the recipe. Maybe this trend is language-specific?
In Burgerland, searching in English under any search engine I know of requires you to sift through a bunch of uplifting life lessons learned by being really affluent and vacationing a lot where you have authentic experiences sipping authentic tea with authentic and exotic people.
Yes but the Spanish-language site is like 30 kb, the English-language site is 100 mb or more with the retracting ad frames, video popups, and everything else.
Not long ago, I looked up a recipe in fr*nch. Surprisingly, it was just a 1-paragraph description, and then the recipe. Maybe this trend is language-specific?
It might be!
In Burgerland, searching in English under any search engine I know of requires you to sift through a bunch of uplifting life lessons learned by being really affluent and vacationing a lot where you have authentic experiences sipping authentic tea with authentic and exotic people.
Okay, let’s try this with the other language I can babble in.
Here is a simple, 5-ingredient, one-pan recipe.
And here is the same recipe in an English-language site. I suppose that reading it will be easier and quicker because it’s in-
I’ve seen much, much worse. That’s actually the least pretentious and bloviating English-language recipe I’ve seen on the internet in years.
Yes but the Spanish-language site is like 30 kb, the English-language site is 100 mb or more with the retracting ad frames, video popups, and everything else.
The latter one’s purpose is the clutter of bazinga malware, not the recipe.
That’s an excellent point.
Amateur hour, Check this out