WinFS for WinXP
Private_Snoball
Dover AFB, DE, USA
Hello there,
I read an article in MaximumPC that talked about the [innovative] WinFS that was canceled for development in Longhorn is now releasing for WinXP. I read up about it but I don't see what is so innovative about it.
The whole idea behind it doesn't seem like it is that spectacular. If I am reading what it does correctly it just puts every file in alphabetical order or in whatever order you feel like sorting them. Can someone please explain to me what is so awesome about WInFS and any possible uses outside of the home network.
Later,
The Rug
I read an article in MaximumPC that talked about the [innovative] WinFS that was canceled for development in Longhorn is now releasing for WinXP. I read up about it but I don't see what is so innovative about it.
The whole idea behind it doesn't seem like it is that spectacular. If I am reading what it does correctly it just puts every file in alphabetical order or in whatever order you feel like sorting them. Can someone please explain to me what is so awesome about WInFS and any possible uses outside of the home network.
Later,
The Rug
0
Comments
Oh. About WinFS specifically. I don't remember if it was integrated into early Longhorn builds or not (it might've been.. or possibly just turned off), but it wasn't entirely functional (obviously). If it was, and was working at least somewhat, I didn't have a clue. I remember seeing/reading that it also sorts files into 'stacks' or some such. Like if you want pictures 1-100 to be together, say for a vacation you took, it would show you 1-100 in a neat little skewed stack. Slide over them and the thumbnail pops out and gets a bit larger. Maybe that was just some picture organization thing planned for any OS, but it's similar.
It's also supposed to make system-wide communication possible by some means or another, I believe. So Outlook (that seems to be really important... Outlook is always the example) could communicate with, say, Word, or Messenger, or pretty much anything else. I think.
Thanks,
The Rug
Heres the deal. Its a content based storage information system. Say you want to find things in your system based on content. Like doing a search for the word *windows*
winfs, will not only return every file, folder with the name windows, it will also return, every document, every text file with the word windows IN it. Its a complete context search system.
http://msdn.microsoft.com/data/default.aspx?pull=/msdnmag/issues/04/01/WinFS/default.aspx
its a techie read but has some good info.
a feature like that is available in mac's new tiger o/s. a little search window pops up, very small , txt area and a search button i think so it doesn't take up your desktop and executes a search similar to the winfs. it also searches the text of files and documents.
In other news, this search feature has been available for awhile now on *nix including MacOS X. It's called grep, and if you want to learn how to use it just open up your terminal and type 'man grep'.
-drasnor