Spotlight Gets Smarter: More Web & Natural Language Search

In Yosemite, Apple introduced the modern version of Spotlight, their combined local & web search tool. Replacing the previous drop-down iteration that was focused on local results, the rebuilt Spotlight became a pop-over window – practically a miniature application of its own – featuring not only improved local searching, but the ability to search and preview web sources as well.

For El Capitan, Apple is taking this a couple of steps further by giving Spotlight the ability to not just do keyword searches, but to better understand the context of searches and return results within Spotlight itself. Though Apple is not being overt about it, in a lot of ways the latest rendition of Spotlight is becoming increasingly Siri-like, as it gains a lot of Siri’s abilities to present data, and not just find it as was the case with Yosemite Spotlight.


Spotlight On Sports

On web side of matters – and by far the most Siri-like addition – Spotlight can now return and display results directly for the weather, stocks, sports, web videos, and integrate with Safari and Maps to include some of their search functionality as well. As it stands Spotlight can still only do a fraction of what Siri does, mostly due to the fact that it lacks Siri’s deep server-side analytic capabilities, but at the end of the day it’s in many ways a pared-down version of Siri for local use, capable of directly displaying results for some very common types of queries.


Spotlight On Weather

The single biggest difference here is really that Spotlight is just for searching, so it lacks any kind of command functionality. However I suspect that may be just a matter of time, especially as Microsoft is integrating their competing Cortana agent into Windows 10.

Moving on, the other major addition to Spotlight is the ability to understand natural language queries. Just as was the case in the OS’s included Mail application, Spotlight overall can execute natural language searches over documents, or over any application it is allowed to search in (e.g. Mail). As with Mail, the idea here is to make it easier to create queries, especially complex queries or queries for first time users, though all of the existing methods of searching remain unchanged.


Natural Language: Files

As it stands I’m finding natural language searching a bit hit & miss. Some queries it handles well, while others it essentially fails to understand the query and falls back to web results. I suspect there’s a trick to this I haven’t quite picked up on when it comes to figuring out just what Spotlight can understand. Still, this is also a beta release and Spotlight is one of the few areas I’ve had issues with (requiring a system reboot at one point), so it may just be a case of needing to shake out the bugs.


Natural Lanague: Email

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  • jimmy$mitty - Monday, June 15, 2015 - link

    Pretty sure El Capitan means "The Captain".....

    Either way it is just OSX. Nothing super special. Maybe when they release a version that runs on all their devices instead of that watered down baby OS that is iOS then it would be interesting?
  • solipsism - Monday, June 15, 2015 - link

    It depends if you're specifically translating from the Spanish term or referring to the actual Ahwahnechee name. Either way it means theo ne who is the leader or ruler.

    • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/El_Capitan
  • Lolimaster - Tuesday, June 16, 2015 - link

    Learn spanish pls. USA is a future state of Mexico.

    "the chief" --> "El jefe"
  • Gigaplex - Tuesday, June 16, 2015 - link

    "Learn spanish pls."
    Why?

    "USA is a future state of Mexico."
    As someone from the southern hemisphere, that's irrelevant.
  • HardwareDufus - Monday, June 15, 2015 - link

    I'm not an Apple user. I have however spent a significant time in Yosemite and have seen El Capitan in person (no, I didn't scale it. sorry if that kills my cred). It's breathtaking. I approve the name. :D
  • Oxford Guy - Wednesday, June 17, 2015 - link

    The Finder icon (and to a lesser extent the Trash) is breathtaking, too, for a different reason.
  • tipoo - Monday, June 15, 2015 - link

    Any chance you guys are going to look into that new (well, old) GPU in the 15" rMBP?
  • Ryan Smith - Monday, June 15, 2015 - link

    The model we have is the base model, so it doesn't include a dGPU. Not that there's much to say about Cape Verde that we haven't already said in the last three years.
  • tipoo - Tuesday, June 16, 2015 - link

    We know the architecture, sure, but I was more interested in the relative performance of that part compared to the 750M, it seems weird that in the same thermal constraints they went with a lower performance per watt part, and claim 70% gaming improvement.
  • jwcalla - Monday, June 15, 2015 - link

    Wait, I thought this was El Capitan?

    https://youtu.be/C2Wcl4SWu2U?t=18m2s

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