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#46
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An update to File Explorer is long past due.
In message , Mayayana
writes: "mick" wrote | Interesting. I guess it never occurred to me to name | a file or folder starting with a number. I can't imagine why I would | want to. | | I do it all the time both for files and folders when sorting photos. | e.g. yearly folder named 2019, then sub folders 01 January, 02 | February. 03 March, etc. | But that's backward, unless you live in Europe. If No, the US way is backward, or at least illogical (-: I had such a folder I'd probably call it Jan-1-19. I also I don't think Mick meant he had a folder for 01 January, just that he had one for January, which he _named_ 01 January to make it (and the other similarly-named month folders) appear in order. (The names of the months aren't in alphabetical order.) don't sort photos by date but by topic. Naming a photo 010120191 is not any better than the camera naming it P10533492. Certainly no _worse_, though, and I'd submit it is better in that it conveys more information than the P format does. (Though in that format, with the digits all run together, I'd have to know the format before I could discern the information.) So I'd never have a folder named Jan-1-19. I _do_ have folders named something like 2019\10\5, though not in my images area. I have folders on my Graphics drive, in the Photos folder, with names like Personal, Work, NASA pics, Roses, etc. The image files in those folders, if I decided they were things I wanted to keep, were also renamed with meaningful names, like "NYC 3". If I name that for a date that I went to NYC I'll have no idea what it means. No, but "2018 NYC" wouldn't _hurt_. But each to his own! [] I actually do name my website server logs. Tue10-1. Wed10-2. Etc. Those then go into a folder named stats Oct 2019. I guess I do that because the date is always a secondary qualifier. The main point is that the folder contains web server logs. Stats. However, if you named them "10-1Tue", they would by default list in order, at no extra effort. -- J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/1985 MB++G()AL-IS-Ch++(p)Ar@T+H+Sh0!:`)DNAf "You _are_ Zaphod Beeblebrox? _The_ Zaphod Beeblebrox?" "No, just _a_ Zaphod Beeblebrox. I come in six-packs." (from the link episode) |
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#47
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Omega ( U+03A9 ) is sorted "last" ( after 'z' ).
In message , Mayayana
writes: "J. P. Gilliver (John)" wrote | I think they're very different beasts; Everything only searches on | filenames - it doesn't do content at all. (I'm not sure whether AR does | filenames.) Oh. I didn't know that. Part of the reason I stopped using Windows search was because it was so bad at searching for content, which is what I do most. If I know the filename I don't usually need to look for it. I know where I would have put it. Very commendable. I too _try_ to sort by content/category, but sometimes there are things that get in the way of that - such as librarian's dilemma, of which more later. (One example is the desire to retain the original filename, so if I encounter it subsequently I can see if I've already got it. [Of late, I've been adding something descriptive in [this] sort of bracket, which isn't often used in original filenames.]) [] | I agree Everything's name is _awkward_, as it makes it difficult to talk | about it; I don't think it's any less _confusing_ than Agent Ransack. Agent Ransack is a unique name, even though it might be an odd one. Everything means everything. The only worse name would be, perhaps, "Something" or "The Other Thing": "Have you tried Something to search for files?" That's what I meant by being difficult to talk about, and why I wish they'd chosen something else. Purely on uniqueness, I think they're about even: I'm not aware of anything else (I was going to say any other software, but actually _anything_) called "Everything". [IIRR the UK telecomms company called EE actually say it stands for "Everything Everywhere", but I suspect even most of their own employees don't know that; certainly most people just refer to it as EE, and that's what it says on their storefronts.] 2 -- J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/1985 MB++G()AL-IS-Ch++(p)Ar@T+H+Sh0!:`)DNAf "You _are_ Zaphod Beeblebrox? _The_ Zaphod Beeblebrox?" "No, just _a_ Zaphod Beeblebrox. I come in six-packs." (from the link episode) |
#48
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Omega ( U+03A9 ) is sorted "last" ( after 'z' ).
In message , Char Jackson
writes: On Sat, 5 Oct 2019 02:04:18 +0100, "J. P. Gilliver (John)" wrote: In message , Mayayana writes: Agent Ransack puts a context menu in Explorer, is extremely fast, and doesn't index. As far as I know, that's the main difference between the two: Everything indexes and has a confusing name. AR doesn't. I think they're very different beasts; Everything only searches on filenames - it doesn't do content at all. (I'm not sure whether AR does filenames.) Of course AR can search on filenames. Why wouldn't it? I didn't mean to imply it didn't; I just didn't know. (I think Everything is (sometimes, at least) a lot _faster_, though, at that task.) [I have both, though I use E more - I rarely search on content, mainly because it _is_ slow - can't be otherwise of course. When I do want to, AR is indeed the one to use.] -- J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/1985 MB++G()AL-IS-Ch++(p)Ar@T+H+Sh0!:`)DNAf "You _are_ Zaphod Beeblebrox? _The_ Zaphod Beeblebrox?" "No, just _a_ Zaphod Beeblebrox. I come in six-packs." (from the link episode) |
#49
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Omega ( U+03A9 ) is sorted "last" ( after 'z' ).
In message , Mayayana
writes: "Paul" wrote | Everything.exe can find your filename in one second. | Agent Ransack can find your filename in two minutes. You're being theatrical. My XP C drive is using about 6 GB. I just did a search for scrrun.dll. It fould that plus scrrun.dll.mui before I could start counting. I then did a search for a more obscure file. A config file for my own software that's buried a few layers down. Since it's my own software I also have a number of copies in my coding folders. AR found all 9 copies in what I'd guess was slightly over 1 second. If I give it a file name that doesn't exist it takes maybe 2 seconds to do a full C drive search. Everything doesn't actually _do_ searches: what it actually does when you type in what you're looking for is filter. It has already _done_ the search, and found everything; when you type the target, it filters what it already knows as you type. (Aha! Maybe that's where the name comes from after all.) Granted, it _does_ have to do the original look-for-everything, and that _does_ take finite time, but it doesn't do it often, and it keeps its list-of-everything up to date. I've just opened it - for some reason I didn't already have it open, as I usually do - and it did "Updating database" for about 20-30 seconds. It's telling me "402,678 objects" in the status line at its bottom. I'll now try your example: It filtered as I type, and as soon as I'd typed "scrr", it's showing "14 objects", being ten copies of scrrun.dll, and four scrrun.dll.mui. As soon as I type a z (so it says scrrz in the box), that changes to "0 objects". That's why I started using AR. It's extremely fast. It will also look in all kinds of files. I occasionally want to search For looking _inside_ files, I think we're in agreement in these 'groups that AR is the best of its kind. (Similarly, most of us agree Everything is best for searching by filename.) [] systems. Nor can AR make up for bad housekeeping. Someone who doesn't create data partitions and who has a 2 TB C drive packed with photos they don't want, downloads they don't need, email they never cull, and software they don't use but don't remove, will not be able to find things as well. (-: [My C: partition (this is W7) has 40.1G used, and that's almost entirely Windows itself, installed software, and the software's own housekeeping (configuration files etc.); I never _save_ anything to C:.] For most things I don't need AR because I know where I put things. If I do need AR it's usually folder search. Software installers are in Software on my "Back40" K drive. Security articles are in Security on my "Attic" J drive. Programming docs are either in the Code folder in the Attic, or in Programming Info in the "Annex" D drive. My customer list is in Work Files, in the Attic. If all else fails I check the "Closet" I drive, where I sometimes dump duplicates. I don't have as many _drives_ (this is a laptop for a start, although I could have partitions), but I do have _folders_ (images, genealog.y, movies, sounds&mu.sic, for example). (Each with many subfolders of course.) [] But I can see how Everything might be good for those people who never delete a photo and name them with dates. I used to frequent the photo newsgroup and was struck by how many people use file organizer software. That was What I in my previous post referred to as librarian's dilemma is particularly prevalent with photos. Let's say you have a folder for the Smith family, and one for Fido Jones your dog; where do you file a photo of Fido with the Smiths? You can't make Fido a sub-folder of Smiths if he isn't part of that family. A lot of photo software gets round this by making "albums", and any single photo may be in more than one album; it doesn't (except for the crassest of such software) create multiple copies, it does it by using "tags", which are in the "albums" which are lists maintained by the software. I don't like this because I like to know where my files really are, and don't use such software; however, I do acknowledge the problem. (Another problem with the album approach is that the list formats are probably proprietary to each software, and maybe even to a limited range of versions of that software.) It doesn't apply just to photos, though - there are all sorts of reasons why a file might qualify to be put in more than one place. (I suppose you can set pointers/links in one of the places, but that's tedious - plus, you are likely to forget them if you ever actually move the real file, or just tidy the structure of the key it's in.) [] level of abstraction for the file system. People like that don't even know where their files are, much less organize them. And that's probably the majority of people. They're the same people who talk about "work flow". They don't use their computer so much as they use software that presents them with a specific conceptual model of their computer. Playing devil's advocate here (I'm more like you), I could argue that that's still "using their computer". (I could also say that it's a matter of degree: _you_ [and I] are happy with the "conceptual model" the OS presents us with of our files and folders, rather than keeping track of where the individual data clusters are on the "drive".) But actually, that started many years ago with MS Word, storing everything in the personal docs folder without asking. Yes, I found the _obscurity_ of that irritating. When you ask these people where their tax records are they say, "I don't know but Word knows". Their photos of last Summer at the lake? Who knows?! "Photoshop knows where they are. That's all that matters.". Backup? Who knows. "Aconite handles that." Or, increasingly, it's I was going to say (playing DA again) why should it actually _matter_ that they don't know where the files "are", any more than it matters what the chemical composition of the fuel you buy to put in your car (other than whether it's Diesel or "gas")? Whether you know that or not doesn't affect how well it goes or how you drive. [OK, minor faults in the analogy - don't over-analyse, I can't be bothered to think of a better one at the moment.] I would have answered myself with "if they don't know where their files are, they're probably not backing up properly", but then you mentioned Aconite (which I presume is some sort of backup software); if that works with Word, Photoshop etcetera and actually does backup properly, then perhaps they really _don't_ need to know where their files really "are". all online anyway, at someplace like Google Docs or Adobe CS web storage. So their computer is really just a kiosk interface to services. It gets further and further away from actually creating and managing files, with people paying for They'd argue - if they think about it, which they almost certainly don't - that creating and managing files isn't what they've got a computer for: it's creating and managing pictures, documents, etcetera. The fact that these are "files" - or collections thereof (e. g. for web pages) - is probably of supreme indifference to them. layer upon layer of training wheels to allow them to actually use their computer productively. (I'm finding your analogy beginning to creak: I'm trying to picture what layered training wheels would look like in practice! But I know what you _mean_. [And I agree, of course. But I'm old, or getting that way.]) 2 -- J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/1985 MB++G()AL-IS-Ch++(p)Ar@T+H+Sh0!:`)DNAf "You _are_ Zaphod Beeblebrox? _The_ Zaphod Beeblebrox?" "No, just _a_ Zaphod Beeblebrox. I come in six-packs." (from the link episode) |
#50
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Omega ( U+03A9 ) is sorted "last" ( after 'z' ).
"J. P. Gilliver (John)" wrote
| I'm not aware of anything else (I was going to say any other | software, but actually _anything_) called "Everything". Everything is called everything. Considering you Brits invented the language, you sure do seem to have trouble with it. |
#51
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An update to File Explorer is long past due.
"Mayayana" on Fri, 4 Oct 2019 21:37:34 -0400
typed in alt.windows7.general the following: Occasionally I might have something with a number name, but in general I don't. So in general, if I have something I want at the top of the folder, I can just name it AA*. And that is why I'll have a filenames _1AA*. When I download pictures from the camera, or transfer scanned images, a dated file folder is "useful" for some values of useful. But I do intend to organize them by subject matter, and rename the files themselves. Someday. I actually do name my website server logs. Tue10-1. Wed10-2. Etc. Those then go into a folder named stats Oct 2019. I guess I do that because the date is always a secondary qualifier. The main point is that the folder contains web server logs. Stats. Yep. _A_ problem with naming files "Jan1" is that then next two files are Jan11 and Jan15, not Jan2 and Jan3, And of course, the months sort April, August, December, February, January, July, June, etc. So we're back to the use of two digits for months. -- pyotr filipivich Next month's Panel: Graft - Boon or blessing? |
#52
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An update to File Explorer is long past due.
"Mayayana" on Fri, 4 Oct 2019 21:37:34 -0400
typed in alt.windows7.general the following: | I do it all the time both for files and folders when sorting photos. | e.g. yearly folder named 2019, then sub folders 01 January, 02 | February. 03 March, etc. But that's backward, unless you live in Europe. Or lives in Europe long enough to confuse things. Unless critical, I still give my birth date as "five five" and it maps in either convention. Otherwise, I say "Mai Fifth" and let them enter the proper numbers in the proper place on the form. Date conventions are one of those things which have lots of "installed user base" and what works in the written world doesn't work as well in computers. Humans can sort out that "the 3rd of June" comes out after "January 2nd" and both are before 1 July. _A_ problem with naming files "Jan1" is that then next two files are Jan11 and Jan15, not Jan2 and Jan3, And of course, the months sort April, August, December, February, January, July, June, etc. So we're back to the use of two digits for months. So I date a lot of things with and ISO standard YYYY.MM.DD. Which also sorts filenames "Stats20190701" comes after "Stats20190603". But, to each his own, there is that "installed user base" even for N=1 systems. If I had such a folder I'd probably call it Jan-1-19. I also don't sort photos by date but by topic. Naming a photo -- pyotr filipivich Next month's Panel: Graft - Boon or blessing? |
#53
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Omega ( U+03A9 ) is sorted "last" ( after 'z' ).
"J. P. Gilliver (John)" wrote
| Everything doesn't actually _do_ searches: what it actually does when | you type in what you're looking for is filter. It has already _done_ the | search, and found everything I understood that. To my mind it's wasteful. If I can find a file in less than a second I don't need a program storing and updating a database to do the same thing. | (-: [My C: partition (this is W7) has 40.1G used, and that's almost | entirely Windows itself, installed software, and the software's own | housekeeping (configuration files etc.); I never _save_ anything to C:.] A lot of that is bloat junk. A new install is typically 7-9 GB. I make disk images for that reason. Win7 will grab a copy of any old thing it comes across and stash it in winsxs. I haven't even tried to track down all the wasteful bloat of Win7. But I've heard people complain about 80+ GB. So I keep disk images in case it gets too big, so I can just dump it and start over. | What I in my previous post referred to as librarian's dilemma is | particularly prevalent with photos. Let's say you have a folder for the | Smith family, and one for Fido Jones your dog; where do you file a photo | of Fido with the Smiths? You can't make Fido a sub-folder of Smiths if | he isn't part of that family. A lot of photo software gets round this by | making "albums", and any single photo may be in more than one album; it | doesn't (except for the crassest of such software) create multiple | copies, it does it by using "tags", which are in the "albums" which are | lists maintained by the software. I don't like this because I like to | know where my files really are, and don't use such software; however, I | do acknowledge the problem. (Another problem with the album approach is | that the list formats are probably proprietary to each software, and | maybe even to a limited range of versions of that software.) And the biggest problem: You need to do something like add EXIF tags so that the software knows the photo is of Fido Jones. If a person knows how to use a file system they can do much better organizing with a lot less work. I avoid the "librarian" problem by not having a dog. But I'm also not so finicky about my system. I'm not trying for librarian accuracy. I want to be able to find the photo later. That's all. So in your example I might have a folder named Personal with a subfolder named Family. That would cover the dog and the neighbors. I also don't take a lot of photos. And of the ones I do take, I go through them before storing them. I don't just download the whole camera storage into a folder. | Playing devil's advocate here (I'm more like you), I could argue that | that's still "using their computer". (I could also say that it's a | matter of degree: _you_ [and I] are happy with the "conceptual model" | the OS presents us with of our files and folders, rather than keeping | track of where the individual data clusters are on the "drive".) | It is using their computer, of course, but they're not using the tool itself. They're using a series of wrappers. The file system was created as an abstraction layer to store and access data. To use a file organizer that shows you a folder containing all JPGs on the system that have "Fido Jones" in the EXIF data is a further abstraction. It's not understanding the basic end-user functionaly of the computer. | When you ask these people where their tax records are they | say, "I don't know but Word knows". Their photos of last | Summer at the lake? Who knows?! "Photoshop knows where | they are. That's all that matters.". Backup? Who knows. | "Aconite handles that." Or, increasingly, it's | | I was going to say (playing DA again) why should it actually _matter_ | that they don't know where the files "are", any more than it matters | what the chemical composition of the fuel you buy to put in your car | (other than whether it's Diesel or "gas")? That's not an equivalent analogy. An equivalent would be that they don't know how to fill the gas tank, but that's OK because their grandson is always with them and he knows. It's a matter of not actually knowing how to use the tool. | but then you mentioned Aconite (which I presume is some sort | of backup software); if that works with Word, Photoshop etcetera and | actually does backup properly, then perhaps they really _don't_ need to | know where their files really "are". | Aconite is popular with "tech support" people. someone pays a tech support person, who in turns makes them pay for an Aconite subscription and sets them up with a gmail account. Aconite syncs to cloud storage. So if the computer has problems, the tech support person can just refresh it with Aconite. and since the person has been set up with things like gmail, they didn't have any local files to lose, anyway. Very convenient for tech support. But the person with the computer is paying a lot in terms of money and privacy for the luxury of not understanding how to use their computer. It's similar with Adobe subscription. People are paying through the nose for creative suite, which is now only available by subscription. If you don't understand the file system and don't make local copies of photos then you won't know that your photos are *only* online at Adobe's site. If you end your subscription you lose your photos. That kind of scam is feasible precisely because people don't understand their computers and can't be bothered. Tech companies take advantage of that. There was a recent discussion about whether Microsoft was eliminating local accounts in Win10. I don't know the upshot of that but I expect that's on its way. They're training people to use an adware/spyware consumer services kiosk. And most people prefer that because it's easy. Most young people don't even understand the idea of owning their data. They've grown up with the likes of Facebook. |
#54
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An update to File Explorer is long past due.
On 05/10/2019 15:13:46, J. P. Gilliver (John) wrote:
In message , Mayayana writes: "mick" wrote | Interesting. I guess it never occurred to me to name | a file or folder starting with a number. I can't imagine why I would | want to. | | I do it all the time both for files and folders when sorting photos. | e.g. yearly folder named 2019, then sub folders 01 January, 02 | February. 03 March, etc. | But that's backward, unless you live in Europe. If No, the US way is backward, or at least illogical (-: Yes to both. They will eventually catch up and adopt the metric system one day. :-) I was taught the english system at school, but once I started work in engineering and began to use the metric system is was so obvious it was a more rational system to use. So easy to learn as well. 50 plus years on I still occasionally compare imperial weights and measures, but metric is always first choice. I had such a folder I'd probably call it Jan-1-19. I also I don't think Mick meant he had a folder for 01 January, just that he had one for January, which he _named_ 01 January to make it (and the other similarly-named month folders) appear in order. (The names of the months aren't in alphabetical order.) Yes, that is what I meant. don't sort photos by date but by topic. Naming a photo 010120191 is not any better than the camera naming it P10533492. Certainly no _worse_, though, and I'd submit it is better in that it conveys more information than the P format does. (Though in that format, with the digits all run together, I'd have to know the format before I could discern the information.) So I'd never have a folder named Jan-1-19. I _do_ have folders named something like 2019\10\5, though not in my images area. All my image file names are named by 'year - number' e.g. this year they start at 2019 - 00001 as of today the last image filed is 2019 - 8861 Categorising, naming, tagging, sorting, keywords or whatever is all done in ACDsee Ultimate Pro. -- mick |
#55
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An update to File Explorer is long past due.
"pyotr filipivich" wrote
| I want at the top of the folder, I can just name it AA*. | | And that is why I'll have a filenames _1AA*. | ?? Underscore sorts after characters. But did I say AA*? No. I meant I name them !"#$%AAAAAA*. Can't be too careful. | Yep. | _A_ problem with naming files "Jan1" is that then next two files | are Jan11 and Jan15, not Jan2 and Jan3, And of course, the months | sort April, August, December, February, January, July, June, etc. So | we're back to the use of two digits for months. | Yes. If I had a lot of date-specific files I guess that would be a problem. But I don't think I have any other than my stats, which are just stored in case sometime I want to look something up. |
#56
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Omega ( U+03A9 ) is sorted "last" ( after 'z' ).
In article , Mayayana
wrote: | Everything doesn't actually _do_ searches: what it actually does when | you type in what you're looking for is filter. It has already _done_ the | search, and found everything I understood that. To my mind it's wasteful. If I can find a file in less than a second I don't need a program storing and updating a database to do the same thing. if you can find relevant files in under a second out of many hundreds of thousands of files, then you have superpowers nobody else has. | What I in my previous post referred to as librarian's dilemma is | particularly prevalent with photos. Let's say you have a folder for the | Smith family, and one for Fido Jones your dog; where do you file a photo | of Fido with the Smiths? You can't make Fido a sub-folder of Smiths if | he isn't part of that family. A lot of photo software gets round this by | making "albums", and any single photo may be in more than one album; it | doesn't (except for the crassest of such software) create multiple | copies, it does it by using "tags", which are in the "albums" which are | lists maintained by the software. I don't like this because I like to | know where my files really are, and don't use such software; however, I | do acknowledge the problem. (Another problem with the album approach is | that the list formats are probably proprietary to each software, and | maybe even to a limited range of versions of that software.) And the biggest problem: You need to do something like add EXIF tags so that the software knows the photo is of Fido Jones. If a person knows how to use a file system they can do much better organizing with a lot less work. not with the number of files people have, and you can't do complex queries either. It's similar with Adobe subscription. People are paying through the nose for creative suite, which is now only available by subscription. If you don't understand the file system and don't make local copies of photos then you won't know that your photos are *only* online at Adobe's site. If you end your subscription you lose your photos. That kind of scam is feasible precisely because people don't understand their computers and can't be bothered. Tech companies take advantage of that. you still don't understand how adobe creative suite works. everything is local and *nothing* is lost if the user ends their subscription. users can even disconnect from the internet and continue using the software and all of their files without issue. users have the *choice* to store copies of their photos in the cloud (not just adobe's cloud either), but that's not required. one reason would be to share photos with friends and family rather than emailing them. the originals are still on their local system as well as whatever backups they have. this has been explained to you many times in the photo newsgroups by numerous people. |
#57
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An update to File Explorer is long past due.
In message , mick
writes: On 05/10/2019 15:13:46, J. P. Gilliver (John) wrote: In message , Mayayana writes: [] But that's backward, unless you live in Europe. If No, the US way is backward, or at least illogical (-: Yes to both. They will eventually catch up and adopt the metric system one day. :-) I was taught the english system at school, but once I started work in engineering and began to use the metric system is was so obvious it was a more rational system to use. So easy to learn as well. 50 plus years on I still occasionally compare imperial weights and measures, but metric is always first choice. I was only referring to the date format (-:! (Of which the US one is neither large-medium-small nor small-medium-large.) As for the weights and measures, they're not exclusive to the US: although legally we're metric here in the UK, there are plenty who are militantly attached to the imperial measures. (Some of which are different to the US ones, confusingly having the same name - the gallon being the one that springs to mind, but I think there are others. Or are used in different ways, such as the inclusion of stones.) Personally, having been brought up after the metric system was nominally brought into schools but also in Germany, I'm more metric than many of my generation, but I still find the inch more suitable for a range of measurements, think of people's height in feet and inches, people's weight in stones and pounds (just in pounds is as meaningless to me as in kilogrammes), and fuel consumption in miles per gallon. (My last car returned 62 mpg on the last tankful before it went to the scrappie. I liked that car!) I had such a folder I'd probably call it Jan-1-19. I also I don't think Mick meant he had a folder for 01 January, just that he had one for January, which he _named_ 01 January to make it (and the other similarly-named month folders) appear in order. (The names of the months aren't in alphabetical order.) Yes, that is what I meant. [] I _do_ have folders named something like 2019\10\5, though not in my images area. All my image file names are named by 'year - number' e.g. this year they start at 2019 - 00001 as of today the last image filed is 2019 - 8861 Categorising, naming, tagging, sorting, keywords or whatever is all done in ACDsee Ultimate Pro. Presumably that keeps "albums" (alba?), as files in a proprietary format, that's not readable by competing similar software? -- J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/1985 MB++G()AL-IS-Ch++(p)Ar@T+H+Sh0!:`)DNAf "Flobalob" actually means "Flowerpot" in Oddle-Poddle. |
#58
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An update to File Explorer is long past due.
In message , pyotr
filipivich writes: [] Date conventions are one of those things which have lots of "installed user base" and what works in the written world doesn't work as well in computers. Humans can sort out that "the 3rd of June" comes out after "January 2nd" and both are before 1 July. Yes, humans are a lot better at handling multiple _different_ formats. _A_ problem with naming files "Jan1" is that then next two files are Jan11 and Jan15, not Jan2 and Jan3, And of course, the months I think the "smart" ordering (which is the default), since XP (or possibly '9x) _will_ sort x1, x2, ... x10, x11, ... x20. sort April, August, December, February, January, July, June, etc. So we're back to the use of two digits for months. Or, again, one digit with smart ordering. Though the algorithm needs _some_ separator. [] -- J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/1985 MB++G()AL-IS-Ch++(p)Ar@T+H+Sh0!:`)DNAf "Flobalob" actually means "Flowerpot" in Oddle-Poddle. |
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Omega ( U+03A9 ) is sorted "last" ( after 'z' ).
In message , Mayayana
writes: "J. P. Gilliver (John)" wrote | I'm not aware of anything else (I was going to say any other | software, but actually _anything_) called "Everything". Everything is called everything. Considering you Brits invented the language, you sure do seem to have trouble with it. Don't try with me on language - you'll lose (-:. No, Everything isn't _called_ everything; it _is_ everything. That reminds me of the misuse I often heard at primary school: "What's his name called?", or similar, when the questioner really meant "what's his name?". It's difficult to give a meaning to what you _call_ a name (other than synonyms for the word itself). I'd have taken your first sentence as just humour (or humor), if you hadn't added the second one, but since you did: I repeat my assertion that I can't actually think of _anything_ that's actually _called_ Everything, with the possible half exception of a telecomms company. And when I say "called", I mean with everything _as part of its name_. -- J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/1985 MB++G()AL-IS-Ch++(p)Ar@T+H+Sh0!:`)DNAf "Flobalob" actually means "Flowerpot" in Oddle-Poddle. |
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Omega ( U+03A9 ) is sorted "last" ( after 'z' ).
In message , Mayayana
writes: "J. P. Gilliver (John)" wrote | Everything doesn't actually _do_ searches: what it actually does when | you type in what you're looking for is filter. It has already _done_ the | search, and found everything I understood that. To my mind it's wasteful. If I can find a file in less than a second I don't need a program storing and updating a database to do the same thing. Fairy nuff. We're all different. | (-: [My C: partition (this is W7) has 40.1G used, and that's almost | entirely Windows itself, installed software, and the software's own | housekeeping (configuration files etc.); I never _save_ anything to C:.] A lot of that is bloat junk. A new install is typically 7-9 GB. I make disk images for that reason. Win7 will grab a copy of any old thing it comes across and stash it in winsxs. I haven't even tried to track down all the wasteful bloat of Win7. But I've heard people complain about 80+ GB. So I keep disk images in case it gets too big, so I can just dump it and start over. I agree. I just can't be bothered keeping on top of it to the extent you do, though do do so to a lesser extent. (FWIW, my winsxs - based on its properties in Windows Explorer, so that may be wrong from what people have said about hard and soft links, junctions, and other arcanery - is 8.94 GB [50,630 files, 11,533 folders], 9.04 GB on disk. So rather more than a quarter of the 40G.) [] And the biggest problem: You need to do something like add EXIF tags so that the software knows the photo is of Fido Jones. If a person knows how to use a file system they can do much better organizing with a lot less work. Agreed, EXIF tags are good, as they're part of the file, not some external software. I avoid the "librarian" problem by not having a dog. But I'm also not so finicky about my system. I'm not trying for librarian accuracy. I want to be able to find the photo later. That's all. I didn't mean accuracy when I referred to the librarian problem - I meant their dilemma; any classification system (such as the Dewey and more recent ones, for books) suffers the problem of when you have an item which it is reasonable to file under disparate sections. So in your example I might have a folder named Personal with a subfolder named Family. That would cover the dog and the That's getting round the problem by just broadening the categories until you make just one that includes both. neighbors. I also don't take a lot of photos. And of the ones I In which case the above is reasonable. I'm also not keen on having folders with only one file in them. do take, I go through them before storing them. I don't just download the whole camera storage into a folder. Me neither. Well, I _do_ tend to download the lot, as they're easier to view on the PC than the camera, but I do then go through them. | Playing devil's advocate here (I'm more like you), I could argue that | that's still "using their computer". (I could also say that it's a | matter of degree: _you_ [and I] are happy with the "conceptual model" | the OS presents us with of our files and folders, rather than keeping | track of where the individual data clusters are on the "drive".) | It is using their computer, of course, but they're not using the tool itself. They're using a series of wrappers. Again, why does it _matter_, except to purists like us? The file system was created as an abstraction layer to store and access data. To use a file organizer that shows you a folder containing all JPGs on the system that have "Fido Jones" in the EXIF data is a further abstraction. It's not understanding the basic end-user functionaly of the computer. To me, that example _is_ using an ability of the computer, that it's better at than a human with a stack of photo prints. If the EXIF tags have been done well (and that _does_ need a human), being able to at will see all Fido photos (whether the Smiths are in them or not), and in the next breath see all Smith photos (whether ...), is a _good_ use of one of the abilities of a computer. | When you ask these people where their tax records are they | say, "I don't know but Word knows". Their photos of last | Summer at the lake? Who knows?! "Photoshop knows where | they are. That's all that matters.". Backup? Who knows. | "Aconite handles that." Or, increasingly, it's | | I was going to say (playing DA again) why should it actually _matter_ [backup] | but then you mentioned Aconite (which I presume is some sort | of backup software); if that works with Word, Photoshop etcetera and | actually does backup properly, then perhaps they really _don't_ need to | know where their files really "are". | Aconite is popular with "tech support" people. someone pays a tech support person, who in turns makes them pay for an Aconite subscription and sets them up with a gmail account. Aconite syncs to cloud storage. So if the computer has problems, the tech support person can just refresh it with Aconite. and since the person has been set up with things like gmail, they didn't have any local files to lose, anyway. Very convenient for tech support. But the person with the computer is paying a lot in terms of money and privacy for the luxury of not understanding how to use their computer. I'm with you. They're with the IT guy. It's a bit like paying someone who knows how to fix your car _and likes doing so_. These people are happy to pay the IT guy, because they aren't _interested_ in those matters, and consider dealing with them a _chore_, which perhaps you (and to a lesser extent I) don't. It's similar with Adobe subscription. People are paying through the nose for creative suite, which is now only available by subscription. If you don't understand the file system and don't make local copies of photos then you won't know that your photos are *only* online at Adobe's site. If you end your subscription you lose your photos. That kind of scam is feasible precisely because people don't understand their computers and can't be bothered. Tech companies take advantage of that. Scammers have always been with us and always will be. There was a recent discussion about whether Microsoft was eliminating local accounts in Win10. I don't know the upshot of that but I expect that's on its way. They're training people From what I've been reading local accounts are still there, but semi-hidden (a small print, unemphasised option during Windows setup), and you're probably right they'll disappear altogether soon. to use an adware/spyware consumer services kiosk. And most people prefer that because it's easy. Most young people don't even understand the idea of owning their data. They've grown up with the likes of Facebook. And lack of privacy. 2 -- J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/1985 MB++G()AL-IS-Ch++(p)Ar@T+H+Sh0!:`)DNAf "Flobalob" actually means "Flowerpot" in Oddle-Poddle. |
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