I can get around with just the basics. Start with command-space to bring up search and type something in. Once results appear it will move focus to the first item in the results list (top hit) so you can just up/down arrow through them. VO focus will stay on the search input so you can refine the search if it's not giving you what you want. One downside of the up/down arrow is it doesn't announce the sections such as "PDF Documents" or "Folders". To do that I have to VO-right twice to get to the results table, interact with that, then vo-up/down to review the results with interspersed category headers. Once you find the result you want you hit return on it to open that file, link, email or whatever it is.

CB

On 10/5/15 5:44 PM, Brian Fischler wrote:
Chris, if you use spotlight let us know what key commands you use with it? 
Example tab VO and arrow, just arrows. What is the easiest way to navigate 
search results. Thanks,
On Oct 5, 2015, at 5:24 PM, 'Chris Blouch' via MacVisionaries 
<[email protected]> wrote:

I think one of the main advantages is supposed to be speed. Spotlight keeps an index of 
all your documents so search results come up quickly. The unix find command only searches 
file meta-data like its name, modification date, size etc. Spotlight searches inside your 
files so if you have a document which mentions pizza inside and is named "my 
favorite foods" spotlight should bring it up while find will not.

CB

On 10/3/15 3:59 PM, Blee Blat wrote:
I'm with you. I don't understand why I would use Spotlight when I could easily 
just use the UNIX find command from a terminal, or I know where my files. I've 
turned off all the spotlight options and turned off dictation and Siri because 
it gets things wrong pretty much all the time. I also turn off autocorrect and 
predictive text because I can type fast enough and all the autocorrect does is 
cause me to type the wrong word when I could've typed the right one without 
that feature. Does anyone care to explain what are the use of all these new 
features other than to making thinking superfluous? All this data monitoring 
stuff just seems creepy. But maybe there is a use for it? Why would I want to 
train the dictator and autocorrect if I can type it in just fine with a 
reasonable keyboard?
  None of this is meant as negativity I'm just wondering how to make use of 
these fancy algorithms without the machine thinking for me and being creepy. 
But it could be possibly just user error or user ignorance since I don't know 
what the intent of these things is exactly?


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