David wrote:
And last, but not least, what does Spotlight not working the
way you wish have to do with disabling it? What is
it exactly that you are trying to accomplish by disabling
Spotlight and manually reindexing everything from time to
time?
That's a good question, and of general interest.
I had a bad experience a few months ago. According to Spotlight, an important file seemed to have disappeared. I did a manual search too, but apparently overlooked it. I thought I had erased it accidentally. I was distraught.
A week later, I came across the file accidentally, while looking for something else. It was where I had saved it. There was nothing odd about the file name, location or type.
Careful checking indicated that Spotlight was simply failing to find it. I tried all kinds of search criteria -- date, contents, various ways of searching for the file name. Spotlight just didn't know it was there.
I logged on to Apple's discussion group and learned, to my surprise, that my experience is a common event among OS X users these days. The consensus on that group was that Spotlight is more trouble than it's worth. The usual advice is to disable Spotlight with a shareware utility called Spotless, and use Easy Find (also a shareware utility) instead, even though it's a lot slower. Oh yeah -- Some folks on that group suggest going back to Panther. Panther's find file function worked reliably.
So, I got Easy Find and disabled Spotlight.
I've reconsidered since then. Spotlight isn't completely useless. You just have to be forewarned that it can't always find things.
So, now I force Spotlight to re-index once every week or two, and I've got Easy Find as a backup search utility.
I hope this is of some use to someone.
Thanks to everybody for all the good comments.
Tim
533 mhz dual CPU G4 Mac OS X (10.4.7)