-Barebone folders. Tags don't play well with terminal and other *nix filesys.
-A ~/dev folder with dev stuff in it.
-Dropbox/iCloud for important, heavily accessed content.
-Alias on the Desktop for all the WIP/very active projects (usually from my ~/dev/ stuff and synced folder w/ dropbox or icloud)
-Dock folder shortcuts for often accessed folders + grid pop-up menu so I can dragNdrop stuff.
- Also, Finder sidebar shortcuts for these folders.
- Downloads are always messy, I usually clean-up every year when I fresh install the new release of macOS.
- For images/photos/etc I tend to use dirs with year and quarter numbers, like 19Q1 as for the 1st quarter os 2019.
Prevents huge dirs that take too long for Finder/Samba to index.
Looking at the Tesla's suspension, it looks like it gradually applied the brakes.. The accel forces would be way stronger if the car punched the brakes.
Btw, it's probably designed to respond to a confidence level curve and apply the brakes accordingly.
Not to mention that, if the dummy car is NOT made out of metal (or at least contain some), the ~70GHz radar would have trouble detecting it.
-A ~/dev folder with dev stuff in it.
-Dropbox/iCloud for important, heavily accessed content.
-Alias on the Desktop for all the WIP/very active projects (usually from my ~/dev/ stuff and synced folder w/ dropbox or icloud)
-Dock folder shortcuts for often accessed folders + grid pop-up menu so I can dragNdrop stuff.
- Also, Finder sidebar shortcuts for these folders.
- Downloads are always messy, I usually clean-up every year when I fresh install the new release of macOS.
- For images/photos/etc I tend to use dirs with year and quarter numbers, like 19Q1 as for the 1st quarter os 2019. Prevents huge dirs that take too long for Finder/Samba to index.