Spotlight on MacOS Generic Usefulness Tutorial

Spotlight on MacOS Generic Usefulness Tutorial

Spotlight on MacOS Generic Usefulness Tutorial

Yesterday’s Trace Route on MacOS via Spotlight Tutorial set me to thinking of …

Environment Interest Most useful generic “Finder” of information
Online (ie. internet) Complete Unknowns Google
Online (ie. internet) Known or Heard Of or Unknown Concepts Wikipedia
Online (ie. internet) Command Line commands Computer Hope
macOS Desktop GUI file finding and execution Finder
dock
desktop
Windows Desktop GUI file finding and execution Windows Explorer
taskbar
desktop
macOS Desktop Command Line man ?
Windows Desktop Command Line help ?
macOS Voice GUI siri
Windows Voice GUI cortana

… and yesterday’s work got us ruminating on …

Environment Interest Most useful generic “Finder” of information
macOS GUI meets Desktop Desktop and GUI spotlight ? (via command-space)

… because, setting it to work on some “concepts” close to a programmer’s heart taught us that Spotlight can, indeed, find things you would have not thought of (eg reverse image searching), in all probability, just by yourself, calling on both the online wooooorrrrlllldd and the more personalized and tailored wooooorrrrrrrlllllddd you’ve established on your MacBook Pro or other macOS (operating system) using computer.

Here’s the other (often embarrassing) thing that can happen, too, that Spotlight might help with. You hear of a “command” or term someone just throws out there and does not explain. Perhaps it is a macOS desktop term or perhaps it concerns networking or some online wooooorrrrlllllddd matter. Spotlight’s melding of wooooorrrlllldddds may sort out this painful ignorance for you!


Previous relevant Trace Route on MacOS via Spotlight Tutorial is shown below.

Trace Route on MacOS via Spotlight Tutoriall

Trace Route on MacOS via Spotlight Tutorial

A tool often used to diagnose DNS networking issues is a trace route. On a Windows command line that can be achieved by the command “tracert” and on macOS command line we can use “traceroute”.

Today, though, we want to be on macOS and use its GUI clarity to view a trace route. What can we use? Blog posting title spoiler alert (and we all know the woooorrrllllllddd needs more lerts) is that we (thank https://macreports.com/how-to-run-traceroute-on-macos/ for heads up regarding trying to) use the macOS Spotlight functionality …

Spotlight can help you quickly find apps, documents and other files on your Mac. With Siri Suggestions, you can also get the latest news, sports scores, weather conditions and more. Spotlight can even perform calculations and conversions for you.

… to search for app information. We use Spotlight (via command-space on this MacBook Pro using macOS Mojave) to search for “Network Utility” where we find the “Traceroute” tab to achieve our aim of producing a trace route of the rjmrogramming.com.au domain, as shown in today’s tutorial picture.

If this was interesting you may be interested in this too.


If this was interesting you may be interested in this too.

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