NotaBene Mailing List 2003-04

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RE: Off Topic: X1, Copernic and other indexers



Version 5 of X1 allows you to set the indexing frequency however you
would like. I have it index once a day, reasonable for my usage levels.
I found that this made it much easier to live with X1. I would note,
however, that the company is very sensitive to user concerns.

Rob

Robert H. Lavenda
Professor of Anthropology
Co-Chair, Department of Sociology and Anthropology
St. Cloud State University
320-308-3034
lavenda@stcloudstate.edu

-----Original Message-----
From: notabene@piper.hamline.edu [mailto:notabene@piper.hamline.edu] On
Behalf Of Jukka-Pekka Takala
Sent: Thursday, May 05, 2005 8:02 AM
To: Multiple recipients of list NOTABENE
Subject: Re: Off Topic: X1, Copernic and other indexers

Barrie Fairley wrote of X1/Yahoo desktop search:

>>
>> I had this on my computer for a few weeks and, although it was very
>> intriguing at first, I ended up uninstalling it. It just tied up too
much
>> computer resource - appreciably slowing a pretty solid system.


My experience is exactly the same. I tried X1 for the first time maybe
some 18 months ago and Yahoo Desktop Search some months ago and
uninstalled both for the same reason as Barrie. If there are ways to
tame it (so as to make it less aggressive in updating its index &
whatever else it insists on doing), I did not find them. Otherwise the
program(s) worked pretty well.

My current favorite is Copernic (free), though sometimes I check
something with Enfish find (paid some $30 a couple of years ago). I've
also checked Google Desktop Search every now and then. For most of my
purposes, Copernic is still superior. With Copernic it is simple to
limit your searches to specific types of files (and you can also tell it
what extensions to search, e.g., *.rtf or *.nb), to specific dates, file
sizes and folders; with Google DTS you cannot (at least I couldn't
find). Copernic also finds partial words, which is functionally the same
as using wildcards in Orbis; it is a practical necessity for
comprehensive searchers in agglutinative languages. Google DTS only
recognizes whole words. You can, however, set Copernic to find whole
words only.

j-p takala











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