Digital Hide-and-Seek
- Loh and Behold
Avant-garde murals and imaginative furnishings characterise a new Singapore hotel - Identity Parade
An iconic style magazine marks its quarter century - Summits of Style
Esoteric treatments in a minimalist setting - A Starflyer Is Born
In-flight comfort with an internet connection in every seat - Take a Hike
Destinations to restore your sense of wonder
These free programs, typically just a few megabytes in size, are easy to download. Once installed, the software gets to work indexing files, a task that can take several hours and is done only when the machine is idle. From then on, you simply click on an icon or a toolbar to use it.
Google Desktop Search (available at desktop.google .com) works inside your Web browser: type keywords into the search field, just as you would to search the Internet. Although Google's program scours Word and Excel documents, Outlook messages and more, to find matches for your queries, it recognizes audio and video only by file name.
Microsoft's desktop-search program, on the other hand part of a new MSN Toolbar Suite (beta.toolbar.msn.com) examines the metadata embedded in multimedia files as well. The MSN program also allows you to create different indexes for separate user accounts. So if you share a computer with, say, your kids and want to maintain some privacy, you can still keep them away from any files you have hidden. (With Google, you'd have to exclude those files from the index altogether.) A special feature of the Ask Jeeves desktop-search program (askjeeves.com) is a separate window for previewing files before opening them. Yahoo's software, which may be released as early as next week, will offer similar functionality. AOL Desktop Search, part of an upcoming AOL browser (aol.com), will be free to members and nonmembers alike. Newcomer Blinkx (blinkx.com) has a unique approach: it automatically refers you to files that are relevant to what you're doing on your computer at that moment. The links blink in the corner of your screen.
A caveat: desktop search might make it "marginally" easier for hackers to steal your private data, Gartner research director Allen Weiner says. But Weiner and most analysts agree that the rewards greatly outweigh the risks. If you've got a firewall and anybody with Windows XP has one by default you should be fine.
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