This search engine completely changed how I use AI search.
It pulls from 80% of the internet that Google literally cannot see - legal cases, financial filings, code repos, threat intel, academic papers.
One API key. Zero blind spots.
It's called AnySearch and here's why every AI agent will run on it: 👇
Here's the dirty secret nobody talks about:
Your AI agent is searching the same ~20% of the web that Google indexes.
Business registrations? Blocked.
PubMed research? Locked.
Finnhub financial data? Paywalled.
VirusTotal threat feeds? Separate API.
That's 80% of high-value data your agent never sees.
AnySearch fixes that with one key.
The magic isn't aggregation. It's the routing.
>> Intent Classifier reads your query
>> Matches it across 4 dimensions: domain x subcategory x content type x region
>> Pulls from the most relevant specialized sources
>> Fuses results using Reciprocal Rank Fusion (RRF, K=60)
>> Returns clean Markdown
You don't tell it where to search. It already knows.
This is what makes it different in practice:
>> "Sony WH-1000XM6 real user reviews" -> aggregates multi-platform feedback, filters out the ad spam
>> "Best Calgary neighbourhoods to buy a home in 2026 with school ratings" -> pulls real estate data + school board reports + local forum discussions
>> "Python async best practices 2026" -> highest voted answers + actual GitHub usage
Perplexity gives you a summary. AnySearch gives you the source data agents actually need.
Here's what closes the deal for anyone building agents:
>> Native MCP server -- plug it into Claude Desktop, Cursor, Windsurf in 2 minutes
>> Skill plugin support for Claude (works beautifully with Sonnet 4.6 / Opus 4.7)
>> OpenClaw integration for one-click setup
>> Token-optimized output (designed for agents, not humans)
Enjoy exclusive benefits right after use, with 1000 daily call quotas for every user
Here's the dirty secret nobody talks about:
Your AI agent is searching the same ~20% of the web that Google indexes.
Business registrations? Blocked.
PubMed research? Locked.
Finnhub financial data? Paywalled.
VirusTotal threat feeds? Separate API.
That's 80% of high-value data your agent never sees.
I'll give you the 12 Claude prompts for free that can help you earn $500 a day:
The setup is stupid simple.
A laptop. Wi-Fi. A few hours you'd waste on Reels anyway.
That's it. No course. No coach. No "mastermind."
Paste these prompts into Claude. Replace the brackets with your actual skill and audience.
Prompt 1. Find the money in your skill.
"Act as a digital product strategist. My skill is [skill], experience level [beginner/intermediate/expert], audience is [audience]. Give me 15 passive income product ideas. For each: what it is, who buys it, problem solved, build difficulty, time to launch, best platform. Rank from 'easiest to monetize' to 'highest long-term upside.'"
Accidentally overheard an AI researcher from Anthropic at a conference bar.
He didn't mention prompt engineering or context windows once.
Only talked about 3 structural shifts that separate people who get real value from LLMs vs people who don't.
I turned them into Claude prompts. Here they are:
PROMPT 1 : MAP HOW YOU ACTUALLY USE AI
Act as a workflow auditor, not an AI coach.
Ask me 5 questions to map how I currently use LLMs: what tasks I delegate, what I still do manually, where I copy-paste between tools, what I've tried and abandoned.
Don't give advice yet. Just build the map.
One question at a time.
PROMPT 2 : FIND WHAT'S REAL VS WHAT'S THEATER
Here's my AI usage map: [paste]
Now identify:
- What's saving me REAL time (measurable hours back)
- What FEELS productive but isn't (theater)
- What I'm doing manually that an LLM should be doing
No points. No miles. No VPN. No travel hacker bullshit.
Just 10 prompts.
Here's exactly what I typed: ↓
1. The Booking Window Finder
"Analyze historical fare data for [route] over the last 12 months. Tell me the exact day of the week and number of days before departure when prices hit their lowest. Show the data."
Most people book on a Sunday for a Friday flight. That's the most expensive combo possible.
2. The Airport Swap
"List every airport within a 3-hour drive or train ride of [city]. Compare flight prices from each one to [destination] on my dates. Include ground transport costs in the total."
Flying out of the secondary airport saved me $180 once. Train ticket was $22.
I canceled Audible.
I canceled Kindle Unlimited.
I canceled Apple Books.
No more $45/month for books I never finish.
Claude turned my laptop into a personal library that reads to me, summarizes anything, and quizzes me on what I learned.
Here are 8 prompts that rebuild the whole system for free (Save this).
1. The Audible Killer
Skip 12-hour audiobooks. Get the core in 10 minutes.
Prompt:
"Act as a book summarizer. For [BOOK TITLE] by [AUTHOR], give me:
>> The 1-sentence thesis
>> 5 key ideas with examples
>> 3 actionable takeaways
>> Who should skip this book
Be brutally honest. No fluff."
2. The Reading Coach
Replaces Goodreads recommendations and Kindle's "you might like" trash.
Prompt:
"You're my reading coach. I just finished [BOOK] and loved [SPECIFIC THING].
Recommend 5 books that share that exact quality but aren't obvious picks.
For each: 1-line pitch, why it matches, and what's different."
Carl Jung said most people die without ever meeting themselves.
He left behind 5 rules to fix that. The first one will scare the shit out of you.
I turned them into a Claude prompt that does the work for you.
Here's how: ↓
Rule 1: Befriend your shadow.
Your shadow is everything you deny, suppress, or hide. Your fears. Your patterns. The parts you pretend aren't there.
Jung's warning: what you suppress doesn't disappear. It runs your life from the basement.
You can't heal what you won't look at.
Rule 2: Follow meaning, not pleasure.
Pleasure is fleeting. Meaning has roots.
Jung believed humans need purpose, not comfort. The people who stay lost are the ones chasing the next dopamine hit instead of building something that matters.