On my MacBook Pro I always install the most bleeding-edge beta versions of MacOS X and the various Apple apps that I can get my hands on. This rarely results in any problems. Occasional hiccups, but nothing long-term or destructive.
But last week my email stopped working on both Apple Mail and Microsoft Outlook. Any time I click on a message to view it, there's nothing there. The emails are blank. They're just fine on the server, but on the MacBook they don't display. My guess is that the internal database where programs store their data is somehow corrupted. And no amount of rebuilds or restarts would resolve it. And so I decided to wipe everything and start over.
It's been interesting.
All the clutter that's been accumulating... all the abandoned parts and pieces of discarded software... all the fragmentation... all the things that made my computer grow increasingly inefficient over the years... it's all gone now. My computer isn't noticeably faster in all things, but it is faster in some. And also more efficient to use.
I should probably write down the steps I took to reinstall everything and just intentionally do a scrub and reset every year.
I'm just not sure it's worth the effort if nothing has gone wrong.
But it does feel good.

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