How to Customize Spotlight's Settings
Posted 03/01/2012 at 8:19am
| by Craig Grannell
Define Spotlight’s preferences and then use it to search your Mac
As OS X has matured and iOS has entered the equation, it’s becoming increasingly clear that Apple’s vision of the future of computing aims to ditch much of the baggage of the past. The mouse is on borrowed time, replaced by gestural interfaces that enable you to manipulate content more easily. Also up for the chop is the entire file system, which Apple is slowly edging towards the exit, to be replaced by app-specific file sandboxes and contextual system-wide searches. If we look back at the history of Apple’s operating systems, this process began in earnest with Spotlight.
In 2005, Mac OS X 10.4 introduced Spotlight, providing a central location for searching your entire Mac and also providing results in an intuitive and grouped manner. Over time, Spotlight has wormed its way through the system. It’s now used to power searches in Finder windows, to unearth messages in Mail, and for searches in various other apps. Throughout, the aim is to enable you to find information merely by typing a couple of words into a search field, rather than laboriously picking your way through myriad nested folders.
But there are issues with Spotlight. It can be slow, the Finder-window interface for setting up searches isn’t particularly intuitive, and if you use a cloning app (such as SuperDuper! or Carbon Copy Cloner) to regularly make a copy of your data, all the files on your external drive will also show up in Spotlight. It’s all too easy to pick the wrong one, launching something on your backup rather than your Mac.
We’ll look at the initial settings you can define in System Preferences as well as creating custom searches that can be stashed in Finder’s sidebar for later use.
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Customize Spotlight’s Settings