Tuesday, May 5, 2026

PSA: For Apple Laptop Users -- Your Own Personal Internal Search Engine -- SPOTLIGHT -- May 5, 2026

Locator: 50716PSA. 

From PCMagazine, link here

Apple's Spotlight is a handy search tool that tracks down anything and everything across your computer, but macOS Tahoe introduces new Actions and Quick Keys functions, allowing you to kick off a range of commands right from the search results window.

Want to send someone an email or text, set up a calendar event, start a timer, create a new note, or change a system setting? You can do all that and more. Even better, you can assign a two-letter keyboard combination to trigger any of those actions and save you some time.

To take advantage of these new features, you'll need to be running macOS Tahoe or higher. Click the Apple icon, go to System Settings > General > Software Update, and click the Upgrade Now button to allow the latest update to install. With that complete, let's go through how to use Actions and Quick Keys with your favorite apps, files, and other items. 

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Spotlight

This is an EDGE application. That means it stays entirely within your system -- it does not go out side your system. The advantages are huge.

Apple will now have three levels of search
:

  • Spotlight;
  • web browser;
  • chatbot.

Spotlight is Apple's fast, built-in search tool on macOS (MacBook, iMac) that instantly finds files, apps, emails, contacts, and images across your computer. 

Triggered by Command+Space, it also performs calculations, conversions, and quick actions (like setting alarms or running shortcuts) without opening separate apps.

What Can Spotlight Do?

  • Instantly Find Anything: Searches documents, images, and emails by name or contents.
  • Launch Applications: Type the first few letters of an app (e.g., "saf") and hit Return to open it.
  • Quick Calculations & Conversions: Perform math (e.g., ) or convert currencies/measurements (e.g., "200 CAD to USD") directly in the search bar.
  • System Actions: Search for "Do Not Disturb" to toggle it, or find files instantly.
  • Get Definitions: Lookup dictionary definitions, search web results, or check weather, sports, and movies.
  • Find Text in Images: With Live Text, you can search for words contained within photos.

How to Use Spotlight:

  • Launch: Press the Command (⌘) — Space bar keys together, or click the magnifying glass icon in the top-right menu bar.
  • View Location: Select a file result, then hold down the Command (⌘) key to see its file path.
  • Open Result: Press Return to open the top result or double-click an item in the list. 

You can customize what Spotlight searches for by navigating to System Settings > Spotlight.

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Ticker AAPL Today

NACHO Tuesday -- And Along With Your NACHO And TACO, Happy Cinco De Mayo -- May 5, 2026

Locator: 50715B. 

Most interesting meme yesterday: Trump has gotten himself into a prolonged, unpopular war. 

  • that may be true; in fact, it probably is true. 
  • the questions are, does Trump care; and is Trump doing the right thing? 
  • I know one thing for sure: Israel / Netanyahu is happy as a lark.

State dinner for King Charles III ("no more kings") --

  • one needs to remember that Secretary of the Interior, Doug Burgum, was one of the few Cabinet-level officials to attend:
  • Secretary of State Rubio was there;  
  • on the other hand, Howard Lutnick was not.

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Back to the Bakken 

WTI: $102.80.

New wells reporting:

  • Wednesday, May 6, 2026: 15 for the month, 115 for the quarter, 272 for the year, 
    • 42102, conf, Hunt Oil, Burke 155-90-36-25H-1,  
    • 41890, conf, Oasis, Feiring State 5793 13-16 3BU
    • 41889, conf, Oasis, Feiring State 5793 13-16 2BU, 
  • Tuesday, May 5, 2026: 12 for the month, 112 for the quarter, 269 for the year,  
    • 41359, conf, Devon Energy, Marvin 27-34 2H, 

RBN Energy:  how a prolonged conflict with Iran could disrupt US gasoline, jet and diesel markets. Link here. Archived.

The U.S. is seeing softer domestic demand for traditional fuels as efficiency improves and biofuels gain ground, but pockets of the country remain highly dependent on imported gasoline and jet fuel. If the Iran war drags on for an extended period, the key question becomes how much of each region’s gasoline, jet fuel and diesel demand can be covered by U.S. refineries and how much each still needs from international suppliers. Some parts of the country could face real product challenges if the disruption is prolonged. In today’s RBN blog, we’ll zero in on which PADDs are at the highest risk for shortages and price spikes.

As we’ve addressed in the RBN blogosphere, the war against Iran and closure of the Strait of Hormuz have seriously impacted the flows of refined products and LPG that underpin the Pacific Basin fuel market. With the strait effectively blocked to virtually all shipping for the last several weeks (see Eyes of the Ranger), large volumes of crude oil, LPG, naphtha and refined products bound for Asia were suddenly stranded, forcing refiners in South Korea and elsewhere to cut runs and curb gasoline and jet fuel exports (see Two Out of Three Ain’t Bad). As of May 4, the situation remains volatile and peace talks are uncertain.

In today’s blog, we use our Future of Fuels analysis to estimate how much gasoline, diesel and jet fuel demand is met by each PADD’s production compared to how much it relies on imports. From this, we identify which regions are most exposed if hostilities drag on for additional months or into this winter. 

PADD 5 Jet Fuel and Gasoline

The biggest refined product risk from a prolonged conflict is gasoline and jet fuel in PADD 5 (gray section in Figure 1 below). The West Coast market is structurally tight and increasingly dependent on imports under normal circumstances, making it especially vulnerable to supply disruptions (see I Need More).

Figure 1: U.S. Regional Prospects and Challenges. Source: RBN Future of Fuels