Amusingly, Google Translate lets you draw in characters you can't read/type, so they could still Google how to Google it!
Not everyone knows that. I know a guy, quite a popular Japanese culture youtuber and a Japanese himself at that (forgot his channel and his name) that didn't know he could draw the characters into make a search for them. He was told by his viewers about how he could do it.
Considering that some radicals are comprised other radicals (殳, made from 几 + 又), or are just kanji in themselves such as 風 (which is also 几 + 虫 + ノ) , you don't have to learn each one. 殳 can be remembered as the two separate radicals without even needing to know it's one itself at all! Or even just as 'the right part of 役'! You can also pare down the list by eliminating radicals only found in rare kanji as well (like 龠).
So really, it's not really 214 radicals to remember, it's a smaller component list that you can build all the radicals from!
Unless you're taking the Kanji Kentei or something, there's very little need to remember much about radicals in general beyond the shape; and even then 75% of the Jouyou kaji are only made up of 51 radicals; it's pretty standard in language change over time to simplify common words, which includes writing.
One more advancement is that you can take a photo of the thing from smartphone and google the text by that photo. Which, I believe has been a thing for 2 years or more now.
I...Impossibmewl.Google it, kuma!As long as you Google it, it's fine kumaa!Why!?Heh-heh-heh...But I don't really know anything about the rules either nya...When it comes to genius, Kuma's the one that's got it in spades, kuma!I don't know how you read this nya...ShougiIndeed...!