Miahael-
Vista- You mean Mahogany? :) Remember that folks like it if they rename it!! 
Thanks for confirming my own experience with its search "function". But, re: 
Google desk search, all's not good news. Google desktop search on a public 
computer can be used to search email if it is accessed through the web and you 
can by-pass the passwords and log-ons (you do have to look beyond the search 
results but it's accessible if you dig a bit)! Do be careful to only use it on 
your own private computer is the advice I've been seeing- Also, that should 
include post-log off and be especially powerful to anyone with a higher "level 
of security" in their account. To me that's not a good thing. (That's not it's 
only non-redeeming security issue/feature: C.f., 
http://www.networkworld.com/newsletters/vpn/2004/1115vpn1.html - you may have 
to bypass an ad!)
Tim
_______________________________
Timothy O. Shearon, PhD
Professor and Chair Department of Psychology
The College of Idaho
Caldwell, ID 83605
email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

teaching: intro to neuropsychology; psychopharmacology; general; history and 
systems

"You can't teach an old dogma new tricks." Dorothy Parker



-----Original Message-----
From: Michael Smith [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wed 8/27/2008 11:07 AM
To: Teaching in the Psychological Sciences (TIPS)
Subject: Re: [tips] Google desktop search (was why psychology is hard)
 
Does the Google desktop search work for Vista?
 
I know that the Vista search is totally useless, and actually doesn't work.
 
--Mike

--- On Wed, 8/27/08, David Epstein <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

From: David Epstein <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: [tips] Google desktop search (was why psychology is hard)
To: "Teaching in the Psychological Sciences (TIPS)" <[email protected]>
Date: Wednesday, August 27, 2008, 9:51 AM

On Wed, 27 Aug 2008, beth benoit went:

> Annette and others,
> Do all of you know about "Google Desktop Search"?  It's an
amazing
> little search program you leave on your desktop that opens a little
> box where you type in any word you recall from a document or even
> email you're searching for, and it finds it on any item on your
> computer that uses that word or phrase.

Seconded.  For Windows, Google Desktop is invaluable.

If you're on a Mac, you've already got the extremely fast and powerful
Spotlight search, but there's a disadvantage: Spotlight does NOT show
your search results with contextual snippets of surrounding text, the
way Google does.  The cure for that is SpotInside--it's an app that
harnesses Spotlight's searching ability, but presents the results in a
more Google-like fashion:
<http://www.oneriver.jp/SpotInside/index_e.html>

There's also Google Desktop for Mac, but I've found that it slows down
the system, presumably because you've got Google and Spotlight each
simultaneously maintaining an index of your stuff.

And finally, also for Mac, there's SpeedSearch
<http://www.smartcache.net/speedsearch/index.html>, which finds
phrases more reliably than Spotlight does, and doesn't rely on an index.

--David Epstein
   [EMAIL PROTECTED]



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