Google Finally Releases Desktop Search
from the holding-that-back? dept
After months of speculation, it looks like Google has finally released a desktop search tool. However, unlike traditional desktop search tools, this one comes at it from a "what have you seen," instead of "what have you stored" view. In other words, it searches stuff on your machine, but also websites you've viewed. This is, of course, much more useful than most desktop search offerings. It also looks like they've set it up to easily integrate your overall web searches with your "what have you seen" desktop searches -- which sounds compelling. They've realized that it makes sense not to force users to change very much, but to fit in another useful feature into what they're already doing. Now, the question is how others will respond. The rumors out of Redmond were that Microsoft has realized they can't wait for Longhorn to have a desktop search offering and have been working feverishly to get that going for an early release. Looks like the search world is still interesting after all.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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Microsoft-only
I wonder if this is a challenge to Microsoft, or just a product "built to flip"? I suppose that time will tell.
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Bill G gets all feverish
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No Subject Given
Also, it does document caching/versioning, so you can search older versions of your document.
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Not very capable
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Re: Not very capable
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Re: Not very capable - NOT!
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Microsoft is, ahem, ahead in this area
Lookout integrates with Outlook to full-text index email. It also indexes filenames on your hard drive, and ... TADA, any mapped drives you have (although this part is not indexed to the contents of files).
The Google Desktop is currently (sad to say) a toy. Who keeps files on their C: drive? Not me bub, at home or at work. I've uninstalled GD for now. When they come out with something that isn't hobbled, maybe I'll give it another look.
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Re: Microsoft is, ahem, ahead in this area
you are not in the mainstream on this. not by far. every client I've had, and all friends keep everything on c drive. they only have one drive. and "losing" material because they "saved it to a weird spot" is, sadly, quite common even for these (reasonably) experienced users. so GD would be a god send for them
me, I still don't trust the privacy implications - how long before someone hacks the google index on my desktop through a trojan or something, and then its nothing for them to find all my password files, etc.
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Re: Microsoft is, ahem, ahead in this area
In an office situation (where a google search would be the MOST useful) MOST employees keep documents on network drives (shared or not) where they are regularily backed up and so on.
My situation is the same, the files I want to search through are the 70 megs of TEXT notes we have built up on all our projects, issues, solutions over the last 2-3 years. We collaborate and we all save our stuff on our dept share to keep our notes accessible by all.
GD WOULD have been the PERFECT solution for us, but since it can't search that share, its pretty useless.
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It works
Still beta though, and I think they probably released it a bit too early. It won't do wildcard searches, and it can't do a .pdf. Don't look for "advanced search" options - there isn't any! As with Gmail though, I think we can expect all that to be gradually added during the next months or even weeks. It's smart and lean.
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Re: Microsoft is, ahem, ahead in this area
Right-click on 'My Documents', choose 'Properties...', and set the target drive to whichever mapped drive you wish to be indexed. Apparently, GD indexes 'My Documents' without caring if it is linked to a networked/mapped drive. I found this out by accident, as I have 'My Documents' pointed to my network home directory.
Of course, this will assume you are okay with changing the 'My Documents' target. Yeah, it's a hack, but it works.
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