The Top 100 AI Models 2026 is the most comprehensive public-facing ranking of large language models available with a free tier this year. Artificial intelligence has expanded from a handful of research tools to an ecosystem of more than 400 publicly accessible models, each competing on performance, speed, language support, and data privacy. This ranking cuts through that complexity by focusing on tools the general public can actually use today, through a browser or app, without a paid subscription to start.
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E-E-A-T optimization for WordPress websites in Hong Kong is the reason you found this article. Not an ad. Not a social media post. Google or an AI assistant decided this content was credible enough to surface because the DOOD blog is built to pass every trust check Google runs before citing a source. That is not a coincidence. It is the result of a deliberate approach to how every article on this site is structured, attributed, and maintained.
AI search engines are changing the way Hong Kong customers find businesses. When someone types a question into Perplexity, Google AI Overviews, or Microsoft Copilot, they get a direct answer with a handful of cited sources. The businesses in those citations get the click. Everyone else gets nothing. In 2026, 58 percent of consumers are already using generative AI for product and service recommendations instead of traditional search, according to Capgemini research. That number is moving in one direction.
Google Business Profile optimization for Hong Kong businesses used to be about one thing: showing up in the map pack when someone nearby searched for your type of business. That is still true in 2026. But something bigger changed. Google now pulls directly from your profile to generate AI Overview answers. If your profile is incomplete, inconsistent, or set up the wrong way for a bilingual market, Google skips you. Not just in the map. In the AI answer too.
Custom website development for Hong Kong startups is one of the most consequential decisions a founder makes in the first two years of operating. Hong Kong reached 4,694 active startups in 2024, a ten percent increase on the prior year and roughly forty percent higher than the 2020 count. Most of those businesses launched on a template. Many of them are about to discover why that was the wrong foundation to build on.
The DOOD Journal covers web development, AI services, SEO, e-commerce, and digital strategy written for Hong Kong business owners and marketing teams who want technical depth without agency jargon. Every article is written by the same team that builds and maintains websites for our clients.
We cover topics that matter in the Hong Kong market — from WordPress and Laravel development to Generative Engine Optimisation, Answer Engine Optimisation, and how local hosting decisions affect your search visibility. We have been building websites in Hong Kong since 2012 and the blog reflects what we see working in production, not theory.
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