When you have a home with a concrete driveway leading to your garage, it’s rarely ever just one giant slap of concrete outside your home. That driveway is going to be broken up into sections, thanks to carefully designed saw cuts. If you’re just looking at it, this seems like it could just be a purely aesthetic decision. Having one continuous slab of concrete could look a little plain or — if you have a particularly large driveway — rather overwhelming. While there are certainly cosmetic advantages to having saw cuts in your concrete driveway, there are practical benefits of this design choice as well.
Out of all the issues that can plague a concrete driveway, one of the more infuriating ones is cracking. There are many reasons why concrete can crack, but there are ways to prevent it from happening. One such was is by creating these saw cuts in the concrete. In a way, these cuts pre-crack your driveway. While regular cracks are jagged and random, these saw cuts can direct any potential future cracks to predetermined locations in order to keep your driveway looking spiffy, even if it’s undergone some significant wear and tear.
To make matters better, having these cuts actually decreases the chance that the concrete will even crack in the first place. Having a place for the cracks to go is just a nice bonus. While the aesthetic benefits are evident, this is mostly to protect the longevity of your driveway, as you don’t want to have degrading concrete that can be a safety hazard, and that you eventually need to repair or completely reinstall.
How the saw cuts prevent and minimize cracking
Ray Slone/Getty Images
While there is a cheap fix for cracked concrete, having saw cuts helps reduce and maneuver cracking in a couple specific ways. The first is targeting weak spots in your concrete’s foundation. Ideally, you would have a perfectly installed driveway that is strong, firm, and even across the board, but that’s a very tough thing to manage when you consider the weight being pushed onto the concrete and the environmental factors it contends with.
Concrete is also a surprisingly malleable substance when it’s dried. Like many other substances, it’s subject to change depending on the climate — temperature, humidity, and other environmental factors can either expand or contract it. This can disrupt the internal structure of the concrete and cause a significant amount of stress, eventually leading to cracks.
When you have cut lines in the driveway, you’re also directing potential stressors to these cuts, allowing the expanding and contracting to happen there instead of all around the driveway. If the concrete starts to crack, they will once again be hidden within the saw cuts, and the structural integrity of your driveway on the whole will remain strong. There are so many benefits to having planned saw cuts in your concrete driveway, that there’s little reason not to have them.
Gemini can suggest Drive file moves and new folders.
Organize My Files requires Workspace or Google AI access.
The tool is useful but still feels limited and unfinished.
I’m an Apple person. I’ve owned an iPhone since 2007 and a Mac since before that, so of course I’m also a longtime user of iCloud Photos and iCloud Drive. I pay $10 a month for the 2TB iCloud+ plan because I have 488GB of data sitting there, including nearly 40,000 photos. Don’t judge me. The real problem is that I’m also a heavy Google user, specifically Workspace apps.
After 14 years of using Google Drive, I have 340GB of data stored there from all the Google Docs, Sheets, Slides, and Gmail messages I’ve created, not to mention file uploads. So I pay $20 a month for Google AI Pro, which gives me 5TB of storage and access to Gemini AI. And because, apparently, I need all the subscriptions, I also pay $20 a month for ChatGPT Plus.
I need to cut subscriptions
I know… I need to cut subscription costs somewhere. I’ve wondered whether I should cancel ChatGPT or somehow, some way, reduce my Google usage enough to stop paying for extra Drive storage. Realistically, I do not think I could ever get my data down to the 15GB Google gives me for free. My Drive has become so daunting that I’ve mostly stopped trying to manage it.
The funny part is that I am hyper-organized. My pantry has coordinated glass jars with labels. My daughter’s toy room has a place for everything. My Google Drive, though? A dumping ground. What can I say? Pre-parenthood Elyse was not so organized.
Because my Drive has never been in a good place, I have let files, photos, screenshots, PDFs, tax documents, drafts, downloads, and random digital debris accumulate with no real oversight for years. I keep putting off cleaning it.
Recently, I had the idea that some AI service could connect to my Drive and help me quickly organize it with a few clicks. Then I remembered my Drive includes things like my house deed, a copy of my will, and my LLC business details, and suddenly giving a random third-party company broad access to my personal data felt like too much to bear.
So here we are. My Drive is still messy, and my subscriptions are still multiplying. Joy. I sure do love that in this economy.
Can ‘Organize My Files’ declutter my Drive?
But today I spotted a quiet little launch from Google: its “Organize My Files” feature is now available. Can Gemini actually, truly help me declutter, organize, and simplify my Drive now? Apparently, it uses Gemini AI to suggest moving loose files in Drive into existing folders or creating new folders for related files. And I get to review everything before anything moves.
If this works, maybe one day I can move my data out of Drive and cancel my Google AI Pro plan for good. Maybe. One day.
How Organize My Files works
What you’ll need: A Google account with a messy-as-hell Drive. Oh, and Google’s “Organize My Files” feature is currently limited to Google Workspace and Google AI subscribers. Workspace smart features must also be enabled for it to appear in Drive.
Elyse Betters Picaro / ZDNET
Look toward the top of the file and folder list in My Drive for a new button called “Suggest File Moves.” Google said it will appear in My Drive as well as in parent folders in Drive.
Clicking Suggest File Moves opens a new Organize My Files window, where Gemini will begin analyzing loose files and suggesting ways to clean them up.
It’s time to use the checkboxes to select or deselect any file or folder that Gemini served up.
Also, if a suggested folder name is weird, just rename it. Check destinations for folders, too. If they aren’t right, change the target. Once the suggestions do look right and you’re happy, approve the changes.
Gemini will then perform the file or folder moves in one batch and return to My Drive.
After all that, Gemini suggested 19 moves for me. Nineteen. And it mostly surfaced recent files I had created or uploaded.
Some of the suggestions made sense. Gemini wanted to move my resume and a couple of resumes I had helped family members create into an existing resume folder. It also suggested creating a new Family and Real Estate folder for house deed documents, plus a Travel Planning folder for upcoming summer trip itineraries I have stored in Drive. But one of the files it grouped under Travel Planning was literally called “Delete,” because it’s a doc I want to delete. Gemini did not realize that, nor did it suggest deleting it.
To be clear, I have hundreds of gigabytes of data and years of clutter sitting in Google Drive.
Still, I approved the changes Gemini recommended. For the heck of it, I ran the tool again. In about 30 seconds, it suggested the same thing: the same file moves, the same new folders, and the same changes it had just made. This feels half-baked.
It’s not at all the sweeping cleanup assistant for Drive that I was hoping for and need. Maybe it will get better over time. It did just come out of beta, and it’s possible Google will improve how Gemini scans Drive, prioritizes older files, recognizes obvious trash, and surfaces deeper organization suggestions. I just don’t want to have to click it 500 times, hoping it finds something new each time.
Looks like I’m still stuck with a messy Drive and a $20 AI Pro subscription… for now.
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