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OSX's command-space spotlight search has been degrading functionally (at least on my machines) for literally years now. It peaked around ~2012, when it would reliably search the full text of all documents on my local hard drive quickly, and not do anything dumb like "search the internet by sending whatever I typed up into the search field to the cloud."

Nowadays it fails to reliably search the full text of documents on my local hard drive, tries to search the internet despite my best efforts to prevent this, and often even fails to find a file ~/Documents/foo.txt when I explicitly search for the string foo.txt. This is uniformly true on several work Macbooks and a couple personal macbooks too.

A truly astounding regression in functionality!


I truly hate it! Why not use Raycast or Alfred?


I took this seriously and thought back to the most recent actually-useful-bugfixes-and-security-improvements release that I can remember. OSX Snow Leopard perhaps?


Wasn’t that also Apple’s last paid OS?


Super pro comment, should be much higher.


There is a new generation of bike locks which have the shackle wrapped in a composite coating that mostly destroys angle grinder cutting discs and similar cutting tools. This is likely the best current outdoor bike locking approach as it requires thieves to have either 1) lots of spare discs or 2) a torch or 3) picking skills, and very few thieves have any of those.


A nickel!?? Good heavens probably the whole pack full doesn't even cost a nickel to manufacture. Manufacturing cost per cigarette must surely be waaay under a penny. Disregarding marketing and distribution expenses of course.


Underrated point! Heavier EV's typically burn through tires and wear components in the suspension faster.


Most EVs aren't enough heavier for this to be a big factor. The only reason some people burn through tires faster is because when you have all-the-torque-all-the-time and can use it silently, it is addicting to do so. This is hard on tires. Boring drivers routinely get the same wear life from tires as they did before.


That's really a derivative work of the Alameda-Weehawken Burrito Tunnel [0].

[0] https://idlewords.com/2007/04/the_alameda_weehawken_burrito_...


Surely they do damage proportional to the fourth power of the contact pressure on the tire contact patch, not the fourth power of the overall vehicle weight, right? So adding axles or wider tires etc mitigates this.


Still not wide enough. If anybody has wider reccos in big sizes other than "oddball" brand, I'm all ears.


I have wide feet and Smartwool socks work for me.

(I hate all the weird color combinations and designs that a lot of companies use, but thankfully Smartwool has a good deaign with their Hike Classic Edition Ankle Socks)


LLM's are useful because they can recommend several famous/well-known books (or even chapters of books) that are relevant to a particular topic. Then you can also use the LLM to illuminate the inevitable points of confusion and shortcomings in those books while you're reading and synthesizing them.

Pre-LLM, even finding the ~5 textbooks with ~3 chapters each that decently covered the material I want was itself a nontrivial problem. Now that problem is greatly eased.


> they can recommend several famous/well-known books

They can recommend many unknown books as well, as language models are known to reference resources that do not exist.


And then when you don't find it, you move onto the next book. Problem solved!


Or you know what, just google books about some topic and get a list of... real books recommended by people with names and reputations? Its truly incredible!


And now we get all the way back to the OP, and having so little knowledge on the subject that you don't know what to Google, or which forums are trustworthy for that topic. And so the wheel turns...


if you need a word you don't know then read overview of the bigger topic, or yoloing google with approximate queries usually helps find the word...


I strongly prefer curated recommendations from a person with some sort of credibility in a subject area that interests me.


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