On 8/27/07, Shaochun Wang [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi guys:
I wouldn't like, but i have to say that all current available linux
desktop search engines are rubbish. Keep reading, and you'll know why.
Personally, I find the find plugin of emelFM2 http://emelfm2.net very nice
and attractive.
just a different tool. nothing breakthrough about dse's.
breakthrough is web2.0. dse has it's place (or users). but for people
who know how to organize and has been on the terminal, then the old
tools suffice.but as data and storage gets multiplied everyday i guess
it will find its way into
Daniel da Veiga ha scritto:
As for the rest of the OP mail. Its a troll, has no question, no
useful comments, no suggestions, neither a request for opinions, and
he ends it like a pure troll, nonsense conclusions based on personal
experience. But he must be laughing out loud that you both,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] ha scritto:
On Wed, Aug 29, 2007 at 01:50:49AM +0200, b.n. wrote:
No, I don't know anything about his background: but most importantly, *I
shouldn't have to know anything*.
I see. Cultural monotheism, decided by you. It couldn't possibly
work the other way 'round,
On Wed, Aug 29, 2007 at 12:17:38AM -0300, Daniel da Veiga wrote:
But he must be laughing out loud that you both, felix and
b.n. have completely lost it, going totally off topic and starting a
private discussion that should take place between you both, and only
you, and most of all, outside of
On Tue, 28 Aug 2007 19:54:27 +0200 (CEST)
Cipher van Byte [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
As far as I'm concerned the structure of directories and links (hard
or symbolic) were invented to eliminate the _need_ of having such
searching engines.
Using those search engines is like reinventing the
2007. 08. 28, kedd keltezéssel 01.02-kor Norberto Bensa ezt írta:
Quoting Shaochun Wang [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
there is no useable desktop search engine for linux.
That's the best thing about opensource!!! Code one yourself :-P
For comfortable people: there are alternatives, like windows,
On Monday 27 August 2007, Shaochun Wang [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote
about '[gentoo-user] linux desktop search engines are ugly!':
Can you imagine what makes a software
consumes five hundrend Megabits of memory?
1. Unused memory is wasted.
2. 64MiB ( 512Mb) is not that much in the modern era
On Tuesday 28 August 2007, Volker Armin Hemmann wrote:
In one word, there is no useable desktop search engine for linux.
they are called 'locate', 'find' and 'grep'.
good tools, fast tools. Feel the love, people
If you know how to use them, you'll have a lot of fun.
What is this desktop
On Tue, 28 Aug 2007 02:20:46 -0500, Boyd Stephen Smith Jr. wrote:
4. Have you used an application based of the Strigi indexer? That's
what's going to be used for KDE 4.0, and I really haven't heard many
complaints about it.
There's also Recoll, which I found to use a lot of disk space for
On 28 August 2007, Alan McKinnon wrote:
On Tuesday 28 August 2007, Volker Armin Hemmann wrote:
In one word, there is no useable desktop search engine for linux.
they are called 'locate', 'find' and 'grep'.
good tools, fast tools. Feel the love, people
Yup but not so suitable for users
On Tuesday 28 August 2007, Uwe Thiem [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote about 'Re:
[gentoo-user] linux desktop search engines are ugly!':
Last time I did a file count in my home directory, it
came up with 170,000 files (including sub-directories). It's a pain to
keep that amount of data organised
On 28 Aug 2007, at 08:11, Alan McKinnon wrote:
If you know how to use them, you'll have a lot of fun.
What is this desktop search engine thingy whereof the OP speaks? I do
not know of such a thing...
It's like locate, except it indexes the contents of files (rather
than just the names)
I have used glimpse for indexing my email archive. It works pretty well,
but requires indexing runs and also the index files are quite large. Good,
though.
And for a bonus, it comes with agrep, if I recall correctly, a fantastic
almost grep tool for somewhat fuzzy searches.
Recently, on my
On Tuesday 28 August 2007, Stroller wrote:
On 28 Aug 2007, at 08:11, Alan McKinnon wrote:
If you know how to use them, you'll have a lot of fun.
What is this desktop search engine thingy whereof the OP speaks? I
do not know of such a thing...
It's like locate, except it indexes the
On Tuesday 28 August 2007 08:00:17 Alan McKinnon wrote:
On Tuesday 28 August 2007, Stroller wrote:
On 28 Aug 2007, at 08:11, Alan McKinnon wrote:
If you know how to use them, you'll have a lot of fun.
What is this desktop search engine thingy whereof the OP speaks? I
do not know of
On 28 Aug 2007, at 13:00, Alan McKinnon wrote:
On Tuesday 28 August 2007, Stroller wrote:
On 28 Aug 2007, at 08:11, Alan McKinnon wrote:
If you know how to use them, you'll have a lot of fun.
What is this desktop search engine thingy whereof the OP speaks? I
do not know of such a thing...
Alan McKinnon skrev:
What is this desktop search engine thingy whereof the OP speaks? I do
not know of such a thing...
Desktop search engines is this centuries wheel invention.
It's simply put a major breakthrough in how we work with our desktop.
Now the wheel didn't start out all that nice
As far as I'm concerned the structure of directories and links (hard or
symbolic) were invented to eliminate the _need_ of having such searching
engines.
I've got every file in directory that it belongs to, and I do have tmp
directory where I put files that does not belong to any category on my
Shaochun Wang ha scritto:
Hi guys:
I wouldn't like, but i have to say that all current available linux
desktop search engines are rubbish. Keep reading, and you'll know why.
1. Beagle is full of buggy. Can you imagine what makes a software consumes
five hundrend Megabits of memory? On my
On 28 August 2007, Cipher van Byte wrote:
As far as I'm concerned the structure of directories and links (hard or
symbolic) were invented to eliminate the _need_ of having such searching
engines.
I've got every file in directory that it belongs to, and I do have tmp
directory where I put
On Tue, Aug 28, 2007 at 07:54:27PM +0200, Cipher van Byte wrote:
As far as I'm concerned the structure of directories and links (hard or
symbolic) were invented to eliminate the _need_ of having such searching
engines.
I've got every file in directory that it belongs to, and I do have tmp
On Tuesday 28 August 2007, Steen Eugen Poulsen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote
about 'Re: [gentoo-user] linux desktop search engines are ugly!':
Desktop search engines is this centuries wheel invention.
It's simply put a major breakthrough in how we work with our desktop.
LOL
Wow, I've got my dose
On Tuesday 28 August 2007, Uwe Thiem [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote about 'Re:
[gentoo-user] linux desktop search engines are ugly!':
Think of secretaries who aren't interested in computers but need to use
them. Think of musicians who want to use computers for composing without
really under them
On 8/28/07, b.n. [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Shaochun Wang ha scritto:
Hi guys:
I wouldn't like, but i have to say that all current available linux
desktop search engines are rubbish. Keep reading, and you'll know why.
1. Beagle is full of buggy. Can you imagine what makes a software
On 8/28/07, Mark Shields [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 8/28/07, b.n. [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Shaochun Wang ha scritto:
Hi guys:
I wouldn't like, but i have to say that all current available linux
desktop search engines are rubbish. Keep reading, and you'll know why.
1.
There's another advantage to a desktop search engine: it can know
about different file formats. Suppose you want to find everything
which references New York City. If you want to use traditional find
+ grep + locate, you will have to throw file in the mix plus
specialized grep to deal with pdfs,
deskbar-applet serves me fine. :)
--
[EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list
On Tue, Aug 28, 2007 at 11:39:44PM +0200, b.n. wrote:
His knowledge of English grammar and vocabulary has nothing to do with
the actual *contents* of his mail, it has to do with just the errors of
spelling and grammar. I'm sure he would have done the same in his mother
language.
...
Let's
Boyd Stephen Smith Jr. skrev:
LOL
Wow, I've got my dose of hype for the next month (or more).
Sometimes it's not that hard to see the future if you have a clue, some
things is just darn good.
Fire, Wheel, Internet, The Web, Desktop Search Engines.
People all laughed at them, but they
Hi,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] ha scritto:
On Tue, Aug 28, 2007 at 11:39:44PM +0200, b.n. wrote:
His knowledge of English grammar and vocabulary has nothing to do with
the actual *contents* of his mail, it has to do with just the errors of
spelling and grammar. I'm sure he would have done the same
On Wed, Aug 29, 2007 at 01:50:49AM +0200, b.n. wrote:
No, I don't know anything about his background: but most importantly, *I
shouldn't have to know anything*.
I see. Cultural monotheism, decided by you. It couldn't possibly
work the other way 'round, could it, that maybe he shouldn't have
I see only one question (the one about memory hungry Beagle) at the OP
post, and the answer is: It may be loading the whole index in memory,
thus allowing faster searches. Unhappy, get more memory, or change
software. Oh no, but he already concluded that all DSE for linux are
bad. Strange, I used
Hi guys:
I wouldn't like, but i have to say that all current available linux
desktop search engines are rubbish. Keep reading, and you'll know why.
1. Beagle is full of buggy. Can you imagine what makes a software consumes
five hundrend Megabits of memory? On my system, this beast consumes
On Dienstag, 28. August 2007, Shaochun Wang wrote:
Hi guys:
I wouldn't like, but i have to say that all current available linux
desktop search engines are rubbish. Keep reading, and you'll know why.
1. Beagle is full of buggy. Can you imagine what makes a software consumes
five hundrend
Quoting Shaochun Wang [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
there is no useable desktop search engine for linux.
That's the best thing about opensource!!! Code one yourself :-P
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