Op Man, 5. June 2006 16:17 daniele favara schrievt: > On 6/5/06, Jani Monoses <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > i've seen xfce has SOC projects ... what if we ask to add to > > > libthunar-vfs ssh support? > > > > Was Xfce accepted to SoC? Got a link? > > > > > Since "time" now i'm administering xubuntu-it section of > > > ubuntu-it.org, that's a feature users ask with file-manager + samba . > > > > > > as i tried for dapper i'd porpose again a desktop search tool ... > > > pkges are ready in revu .. at least we can see how the devel reacts > > > and if he'll contribute with xubuntu. So mainly having those packages > > > in universe would be a first step. > > > > I agree a search tool is needed. Even a simple Ctrl-F (again Win95 style) > > not necessarily > > a beagle-like one, although the latter is nice too of course. > > no .. no beagle no mono .. pure c++
swish++ Description: Simple Document Indexing System for Humans: C++ version SWISH++ is a Unix-based file indexing and searching engine (typically used to index and search files on web sites). It was based on SWISH-E although SWISH++ is a complete rewrite. SWISH++ was developed to circumvent author's difficulties with using the SWISH-E package. features: * Lightning-fast indexing * Indexes META elements, ALT, and other attributes * Selectively not index text within HTML or XHTML elements * Intelligently index mail and news files * Index Unix manual page files * Apply filters to files on-the-fly prior to indexing * Index non-text files such as Microsoft Office documents * Modular indexing architecture * Index new files incrementally * Index remote web sites * Handles large collections of files * Lightning-fast searching * Optional word stemming (suffix stripping) * Ability to run as a search server * Easy-to-parse results format * Generously commented source code It only needs a gui frontend, e.g. in python. I'm using it on my documetation partition (2.5Gb) and never saw a faster search and indexing tool like swish++. And so it was on my old machine, AMD K6-III 500Mhz, should be comparable to a PIII 400Mhz. regards, thomas -- xubuntu-devel mailing list xubuntu-devel@lists.ubuntu.com https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/xubuntu-devel