Hi Donald, I've seen other "Personal Information Management (PIM)" hardware and software, most recently and notably Palm's LifeDrive (http://www.palm.com/us/products/mobilemanagers/lifedrive/). I've also seen other USB-based PIMs that embed a small executable along with a (proprietary) database - mostly in the realm of 'personal medical records'.
There's a list of links on "Who's working on Personal Information Management?" (July 2003) at: http://www.iis.ee.ic.ac.uk/~rick/pim.htm Thomas -----Original Message----- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Tuesday, May 23, 2006 5:46 PM To: Derby Discussion Subject: Re: Introduction That is a good question, Dave. First of all, I'll be blunt, I don't necessarily trust either Google or Microsoft. Second, though searchable is certainly a good idea, it isn't browseable. For really old stuff, I might not be able to remember any sufficiently distinct criteria in order to be able to find what I'm looking for. On the desktop and in desktop apps, tools for filing and managing information objects are all one-dimensional. Also, the desktop search approach does not break apart information that is only together because it comes from the same source. Mail messages are still stored in mailbox files, documents in some arbitrary folder. Am I making any sense here? Thanks, Donald -------------- Original message ---------------------- From: David Van Couvering <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > Very interesting! > > I ask this because it will be asked: how do you distinguish this > (other than it being open source and portable) from Google Desktop and > the stuff that is coming out in Windows Vista where basically your > entire filesystem is tied in with a relational database (MS SQL > Server) and is fully indexable/queryable?
