Tech

Addendum to my previous post about ecosia—after a couple weeks I ended up moving to DuckDuckGo for search. I was impressed by DDG’s passphrase-based method of sharing settings between browsers, instead of using accounts. Overall, it feels thoughtfully implemented and the results are good enough.

I forgot that ecosia existed, but I recently learned it uses google’s search index. I’ve been giving it a try and like the results better than duckduckgo. Feels like using google without all the junk they clutter the page with.

System Data and OmniDiskSweeper

Recently when checking my Mac’s storage usage, I noticed that the System Data category had ballooned to over 250GBs. Even with 1TB of storage, this seemed excessive and I wanted to get the the bottom of what was taking up so much space.

After some research online, I learned that I had many prior versions of Xcode simulators sitting around that were no longer available to be used. These were easily pruned, and doing so freed up a dozen or so gigabytes of space, but not nearly enough to make much of a difference in the reported amount of of disk space belonging to System Data.

Next, I took a look at local Time Machine snapshots. I didn’t really want to mess with these, but I did find that deleting some large and no longer needed files that were sitting on my drive also helped reduce the size of these snapshots. Nevertheless, I still had over 200GB devoted to System Data.

I continued by looking through my ~/Library folder and its many subdirectories, convinced that the reason for the bloat must be found there, but the numbers just weren’t adding up. Finally, I tried installing OmniDiskSweeper after seeing it recommended a few times during my online searches. I ran it and within a few minutes it had indexed all of my directories and organized them more or less by size.

At first I wasn’t sure what to do with this information, because I still didn’t know what was safe to delete. But soon I saw something that I hadn’t before—OmniDiskSweeper was showing a hidden com.apple.podcasts directory within my ~/Library folder. That directory in turn had a tmp folder with many snippets of previously-streamed podcast episodes. Over 100GB worth of snippets, in fact.

I know enough about stream buffering to know that generally speaking, the way it works is that small 15 second or so pieces of a larger stream are downloaded ahead of time. The snippets I found were undoubtably of this nature, which is why they were found in such an obscure location. What still isn’t clear to me, however, is why over a year's worth of these segments were kept on my disk well after the episodes they belonged to had been listened to, deleted from the podcasts app, and otherwise forgotten.

I deleted all 100GB of these old podcast snippets and restarted my Mac. I’m happy to report that after doing so, I'm now consistently only seeing ~90GB devoted to System Data. That still feels like more than necessary, but it’s a major improvement.

The clip of Joanna Stern’s interview with Craig Federighi and Greg Joswiak was a bit hard to watch. I agree with their points about the reductiveness of associating ML solely with chatbots, but their defensiveness around aggressively marketing what has so far amounted to vaporware was palpable.