ZDNet UK


Skip to Main Content

ZDNet.co.uk - Winner of Best Business Website 2007
  1. Home
  2. News
  3. Blogs
  4. Reviews
  5. Prices
  6. Resources
  7. Community
  8. My ZDNet

 

ZDNet UK RSS Feeds


IT Jobs

Desktop platforms Toolkit in association with http://ad.doubleclick.net/clk;205413468;14699245;m?http://adfarm.mediaplex.com/ad/ck/2397-58840-22058-14

Apple puts the Spotlight on desktop search

Stefanie Olsen CNET News.com

Published: 12 Jan 2005 09:30 GMT

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendly
  • Post Comment

Not to miss the search beat reverberating throughout the PC market, Apple chief Steve Jobs touted the company's innovations in desktop search coming with its next Mac OS X upgrade.

Specifically, Jobs said Apple has a superior vantage point from which to build in technology for finding files buried on the operating system, compared with third-party application makers launching products for the same purpose. Google, for example, has said it plans to create a desktop search tool for Macs.

"When you build it into the operating system, you can do things that you can't when it's sitting off to the side," Jobs said on Tuesday during his keynote speech at the annual Macworld Expo in San Francisco.

Last June, Apple highlighted new search technology called Spotlight that it said would feature in an upcoming version of its operating system, Tiger. In November, the company gave greater detail about how the technology works in documents posted to its Web site.

Jobs previewed the feature during his speech on Tuesday, and said the update is on track to be delivered in the first half of 2005. "And that is going to be long before Longhorn," Jobs said, in an apparent dig at rival Microsoft's much-heralded search technology for the operating system. Longhorn is slated to ship in the second half of 2006.

Spotlight is an indexing engine that tracks every file as it is created, opened, changed, copied or deleted. By constantly tracking all of those files, as well as their complete contents, Spotlight can then quickly and powerfully search the files at a moment's notice. When a person tries to remember where he or she stored travel information for an upcoming vacation, for instance, Spotlight already knows which files contain the words "Jamaica" or "hotel".

Spotlight can catalogue plain text, Microsoft Office documents, address book contacts, MP3 and AAC audio and QuickTime movies, among other files. There's even a concept in Tiger called Smart Folders that will pull together files based on a combination of keywords or file attributes.

Jobs also demonstrated a feature called Dashboard that includes numerous research tools. Those include a flight tracker, a dictionary and thesaurus, a stock look-up service, a language translator and a currency converter, as well as links to an address book and calendar.

Developers also can write programs that incorporate Spotlight-based searching, which is not possible with downloaded software such as Google's that might not be on a particular user's hard drive.

Blinkx, a desktop-search software maker, introduced a Mac version of its software this week, in one of the first search applications for the computer.

On the PC, numerous companies including Yahoo, Google, Ask Jeeves, X1 Technologies and Microsoft's MSN have introduced software to scour files on the hard drive.

Operating system makers like Apple and Microsoft say they can go a step further by building improved search into the OS, however. Because the operating system controls the file system, it can enable deeper searching of files, attaching additional information, or metadata, to each file. Tiger has such a metadata store, which is what makes Spotlight possible.

Still, Spotlight choked in the Macworld spotlight at one point. While demonstrating the search tool, Jobs' machine locked on an image that he had accidentally called up. "That's why we have back-up systems here," he said.

CNET News.com's Scott Ard and Ina Fried contributed to this report.

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendly Print with Dell

Did you find this article useful?
64 out of 125 people found this useful



Related Jobs

Head of Information Systems

Head of Information Systems South West - Swindon Book Club Associates Founded in 1966, BCA is the UKs largest direct marketing book club business, ...

C++ Developer who is a good team player - Warwick

A small company based in Warwick are searching for a Software Developer with skill sets in C++ and GCC experience on Linux operating systems. C++ and ...

Junior Software Tester

In uncertain times, are you still searching for a new job that gives security and is based in Surrey? My client is searching for a Junior Software ...

Featured Talkback

So if you upgrade to XP SP3 you can't uninstall Internet Explorer, I'm quite sure I'm having a Deja-vu feeling about MS preventing people from uninstalling Internet Explorer in other Windows products.

By: TheKLF99

Read full story:
Upgraders to XP SP3 warned over IE downgrades

Desktop Management Benchmarking

Test Your Desktop Management Systems

How good are your company's desktop management solutions? How do they compare with those of your peers?

Take two minutes to complete our new Desktop Management and Energy Consumption benchmark, and find out what issues your business needs to focus on.