[AI] Desktop search tools

2007-11-09 Thread V. Balakrishnan
Hello friends,

Here is some useful info on desktop search.

Balakrishnan

Desktop search tools make computer use easier

IANS

WASHINGTON: With computers these days, it's all about
search and there's a good reason. With mounds upon
mounds of data on our hard drives, the primary
obstacle we face is finding what we need when we need
it.

The irony is that it's almost easier to find
information online than it is to find it on our own
PCs. Thankfully, that's changing. New tools are going
some
way toward making our own hard drives as accessible as
what we see online.

But to make your PC truly search friendly, you have to
know how to optimise it for faster searching - and
which tools can get you to the information you
need the fastest.

Comprehensive and ubiquitous hard drive searching may
be the single best reason to upgrade to Vista if
you're considering the move. Vista puts a search
field almost everywhere - on the Start menu, in the
Windows Explorer task bar, and even in many
applications, including Media Player and Internet
Explorer.

Microsoft calls this feature Instant Search. What
makes it different from previous implementation of
search in Windows is that Instant Search gives you
results almost in real time.

Open the Start menu, for instance, type in the first
few letters of a program or file you're looking for,
and as you type a list of search results will
present you will names of programs and files that
Vista thinks you're seeking.

Windows XP and earlier versions do not have the
Instant Search feature found in Vista. Instead, XP
users must initiate a search by using the Search
option
in the Start menu or by pressing the Windows key and
tapping the latter F for Find. Searches take much
longer this way than they do in Vista, and you must
specify whether you're searching for file names or for
contents within one or more files.

But Microsoft has made available its Windows Desktop
Search (WDS) application (
www.microsoft.com/windows/products/winfamily/desktopsearch
) to users of Windows XP, and with it you can improve
substantially the speed and accuracy with which you
can find what you need.

Although thanks to Instant Search and WDS, Microsoft
has an edge in search for Windows users, Google and
Yahoo were in the desktop search game early - and
they won over lots of fans. Google's Desktop Search (
//desktop.google.com
) and Yahoo Desktop Search (
http://desktop.yahoo.com)
are still top-notch tools, and they're available for
more platforms, including Linux and the Mac.
Both tools are free.

Google's Desktop Search tool, in fact, gives users
what some feel are the best attributes of Vista -
integrated search and a sidebar with gadgets - without
the overhead imposed by Vista's Aero interface. What's
more, Google Desktop Search has that familiar Googlish
look and feel that has endeared millions
of Internet users.

But it's the Yahoo Desktop Search tool that arguably
has made the greatest strides in usability. The latest
iteration of Yahoo's Desktop Search tool shows
you search results as you type, much as Vista's
Instant Search does. Once indexed, searches generally
occur instantaneously - or so quickly that results
appear to be instantaneous.

The search tool goes farther than others to show you
the contents of files as they were created. Yahoo
Desktop Search includes viewers for more than 400
file types, so that you can see documents that might
be stored on your PC even if you no longer have the
applications that created those documents installed.

Copernic Inc., though, has been putting out products
that do desktop search longer than just about anyone
else. And the company's latest free product, Copernic
Desktop Search 2 differs from the browser-based
products of Yahoo and Google in that it comes as a
standalone application. But its search capabilities
are widely seen as some of the best around.

Gone are the days when an effective desktop search
tool can be seen as an option. The good news is that
there are plenty of free tools available to you,
no matter which operating system you use. Find the one
that's best for you, and get back the time you would
have spent searching for information you know
you've stored somewhere.


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[AI] Desktop search tools make computer use easier

2007-10-22 Thread vishnu ramchandani
Desktop search tools make computer use easier

IANS 

WASHINGTON: With computers these days, it's all about
search and there's a good reason. With mounds upon
mounds of data on our hard drives, the primary
obstacle we face is finding what we need when we need
it. 

The irony is that it's almost easier to find
information online than it is to find it on our own
PCs. Thankfully, that's changing. New tools are going
some
way toward making our own hard drives as accessible as
what we see online. 

But to make your PC truly search friendly, you have to
know how to optimise it for faster searching - and
which tools can get you to the information you
need the fastest. 

Comprehensive and ubiquitous hard drive searching may
be the single best reason to upgrade to Vista if
you're considering the move. Vista puts a search
field almost everywhere - on the Start menu, in the
Windows Explorer task bar, and even in many
applications, including Media Player and Internet
Explorer.

Microsoft calls this feature Instant Search. What
makes it different from previous implementation of
search in Windows is that Instant Search gives you
results almost in real time. 

Open the Start menu, for instance, type in the first
few letters of a program or file you're looking for,
and as you type a list of search results will
present you will names of programs and files that
Vista thinks you're seeking. 

Windows XP and earlier versions do not have the
Instant Search feature found in Vista. Instead, XP
users must initiate a search by using the Search
option
in the Start menu or by pressing the Windows key and
tapping the latter F for Find. Searches take much
longer this way than they do in Vista, and you must
specify whether you're searching for file names or for
contents within one or more files. 

But Microsoft has made available its Windows Desktop
Search (WDS) application (
www.microsoft.com/windows/products/winfamily/desktopsearch
) to users of Windows XP, and with it you can improve
substantially the speed and accuracy with which you
can find what you need. 

Although thanks to Instant Search and WDS, Microsoft
has an edge in search for Windows users, Google and
Yahoo were in the desktop search game early - and
they won over lots of fans. Google's Desktop Search ( 
//desktop.google.com
) and Yahoo Desktop Search (http://desktop.yahoo.com)
are still top-notch tools, and they're available for
more platforms, including Linux and the Mac.
Both tools are free.

Google's Desktop Search tool, in fact, gives users
what some feel are the best attributes of Vista -
integrated search and a sidebar with gadgets - without
the overhead imposed by Vista's Aero interface. What's
more, Google Desktop Search has that familiar Googlish
look and feel that has endeared millions
of Internet users. 

But it's the Yahoo Desktop Search tool that arguably
has made the greatest strides in usability. The latest
iteration of Yahoo's Desktop Search tool shows
you search results as you type, much as Vista's
Instant Search does. Once indexed, searches generally
occur instantaneously - or so quickly that results
appear to be instantaneous. 

The search tool goes farther than others to show you
the contents of files as they were created. Yahoo
Desktop Search includes viewers for more than 400
file types, so that you can see documents that might
be stored on your PC even if you no longer have the
applications that created those documents installed.

Copernic Inc., though, has been putting out products
that do desktop search longer than just about anyone
else. And the company's latest free product, Copernic
Desktop Search 2 differs from the browser-based
products of Yahoo and Google in that it comes as a
standalone application. But its search capabilities
are widely seen as some of the best around. 

Gone are the days when an effective desktop search
tool can be seen as an option. The good news is that
there are plenty of free tools available to you,
no matter which operating system you use. Find the one
that's best for you, and get back the time you would
have spent searching for information you know
you've stored somewhere. 


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