Archive for the ‘tech/infomgmt’ Category

Personal wiki and multiple desktops

Monday, July 4th, 2005

I’ve found PersonalWiki a good way to keep a lot of information that was previously distributed in text files, outlook, jabber histories, etc. It’s a single, low-friction, hypertext place, with lots of good search capabilities, and my implementation is based on a free and open solution with a great support community (MoinMoin).

Now that I’ve got MultipleDesktops working smoothly for simple things using Subversion, the obvious question is can I use it to keep my PersonalWiki synchronized across machines as well?

Yes, and I’m rather happy with the result; see this experience paper for details (a wiki page at MoinMoin itself).

The coming search wars

Wednesday, May 19th, 2004

John Markoff at NYT reports on google’s early counter to Longhorn searching, a PC file and text search utility.

The project, code-named Puffin, has been running internally for a year, and is overseen by a previous MS product manager. It will start as a free download, though no sign of it as of this writing. As google goes after some of this Longhorn stuff, MS is preparing an advanced web search service to counter google.

Not having looked at Longhorn, I see that it intends to make the standalone browser unnecessary. I’ve grown attached to modern browsers’ level of personalization and continuing stream of innovation in the form of plugins; but maybe Longhorn will blunt the inroads being made in browser space. At the moment, browsers are a very “sticky” product for me.

And natural language queries: I’m anxious to see what “where are my vacation photos” returns–I can imagine how ‘vacation’ and ‘photo’ are handled, but what about ‘where’ and ‘my’? I’m sure NL has come a long way since the ’90s when I was spending so much time on NL frontends to SQL databases.