You know, when I first stumbled on zeitgeist running on my system a year or
so ago, I didn't know what in the world it was doing, although it appeared
to be logging... something. And I think I probably forced it to quit out of
pure habit, before going online to figure out what it was actually doing.
For the next few months I was pretty ambivilant about having it logging
stuff on my system, and continued to kill it occasionally without really
know what it was doing :p. And then I realized something - its actually
quite useful. By keeping *ALL* logging in one place, it makes it much
easier to keep track of, and also much easier to make sure that only those
applications, etc which you want to be logged are actually logged. Of
course, this is made immeasurabley easier w/ the awesome privacy settings
in Ubuntu 12.04 (I'm honestly not sure - does such a thing exist in other
distros?).

Anyhow, to the point at hand...  With GNOME-Clocks, having zeitgeist keep
track of alarms, timers, etc makes sense since it allows users to close
clocks when not in direct use, thereby saving resources while also keeping
their alarms/timers/etc in place. The same I imagine is true for
Epiphany/Web as well as many other programs. It also of course enables
users to easily erase logs if/when they so choose, which is, IMHO just as
important these days as keeping logs in the first place, if not more so.

Emily

--
Whatever you can do, or dream you can, begin it. Boldness has genius, power
and magic in it. -  Goethe

Be who you are and say what you feel because those who mind don't matter
and those who matter don't mind. - Dr.Seuss

Not everything that can be counted counts, and not everything that counts
can be counted. - Albert Einstein
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