I think what Allen was saying is that this "new" form of searching is not as intuative for folks like us that remember more of the last century than we do of the current one (no offence, Allen, just trying to help clarify a point well).
For us, you should just put in what you wish to say and that's the end of it. We shouldn't need to put "tags" or "labels" on everything we make or try to find, or worry that our string is too short to get us the desired result we want, or worry that what we're trying to convey is going to be misunderstood by some algorithm. We're just not "wired" like that. (For the younger generation: We're not "coded" like that).
If there was a guide of some sorts that would give us older generation on how to "properly" search for things in this "new world" of "tags" and such, then it would be somewhat easier for us and we wouldn't get frustrated just because we mean one thing and the "generational gap" in programming understands another.
Heck, I remember punch cards and 5-1/4 floppies being standard, as well as Pascal and Fortran, despite the fact I never used either of them. When I finally did get a chance to try and program something, it was some very basic stuff in the Army to write simple batch files to get things to execute in Win-95.
Did that stop me from trying "newer" stuff? Well, not really, but I didn't go "whole-hog" into the new frontier either.
I realize there are older folks here that use things like social media better than most kids in high school right now, but I'm not one of them. This forum (and a few others that are like-minded) are my extent of "socializing" outside of "face-to-face" with friends.
It's not because I don't like to socialize, but rather, this place and others like it have a more "classic" feel and the people around here are more empathetic to others than they seem to be at other places.
And if you dissappear for a while, well, most people realize it's because we have lives outside of this wonderful and fullfilling hobby of ours. There seems to be more patience and understanding than there is with the "instant gratification" feeling I get from other sites.
I've had similar frustrations with several sites for FS these days, which is why I'm basically sticking around here, CalClassics, and Retroavia from now on. You three seem to have the type of "zen" I'm looking for these days in something along the lines of a fullfilling hobby.
I may try to see about signing back into Flightsim, but I'm not too keen on the fact they are basically turning that place over to a "social media platform" so I may just stay away on principles.
We'll see.
Saludos!
Jorge
Miami, FL