Fair point. Have heard about a couple of things not working as they should in Sierra, although that's pretty much bullshit on the hardware manufacturers side and not in macOS per se.

Still, it makes me think hard about pushing the upgrade button.

Probably the way to go. Urgh, hate having to adjust to the machine's oddities, rather than the other way around.

Maybe I should upgrade to Sierra some day soon, seeing as how it should be as good as it gets when you're at 9 months after the first release.

Finder has a very annoying behavior in El Capitan. Not sure if it was there earlier as well, as I just don't remember anymore. I do know for sure that Snow Leopard didn't have it, and that's just how I like it.

What I'm referring to is the frustrating thing it does when you attempt to drag a file from one location to another, and needs to "open" the target folder before you successfully move said file. Why can't I just drop the damn thing on the representation of the folder instead of this much slower and much more annoying way? Needing to navigate back to the origin folder gets old, really fast.

Either this is some weird defect in my installation of El Capitan, or Apple decided this was a great idea at some point in the last two years.

I disagree with Apple, if they think this is good.

I'm not thrilled to be here due to the constant construction noise from upstairs.

Another favorite.

Right now I'm working on a machine that the customer reported as randomly shutting down. So far it's been rock-solid, of even a hiccup. Must be the Kryptonite in my back pocket…

Doing hardware service is more fun when the device doesn't do anything near what the error description says it does…

Did I just add even more eurobeat to my old iPhone 3GS, so my commute to and from work will be more enjoyable? Yes, yes I did!

Yes, exactly. Only that it doesn't annoy the heck out of you all the time, and actually does its job. ;D

// @kdfrawg

And not all too much more fun either.