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KDE Plans 'Google-like' Search Capabilities

CoolFX writes "Developers of KDE have announced plans to simplify searching for files on the open-source Linux desktop environment by adding a Google-style search feature. The next version of KDE, which will either be called 3.4 or 4, is expected to include the new search feature... Aaron Seigo, a KDE developer, said the community has already been discussing and writing code for the new search engine at the KDE Community World Summit."

5 of 356 comments (clear)

  1. Like Spotlight? by stealthv · · Score: 5, Interesting

    What exactly is a Google-like search feature? I'm assuming they mean something like Spotlight.

  2. wow by minus_273 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    the spotlight is really on KDE right now.. hmm..

    --
    The war with islam is a war on the beast
    The war on terror is a war for peace
  3. Ho hum by mehaiku · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Somebody wake me up when this has been integrated with various useful reiser4 plugins.

  4. Feature request! by bahamat · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Don't tie it to KDE! Make it KDE independant!

    Make it so it can be used from the command prompt. Make it so it can be used from GNOME. Make it so it can be used by other non-de X apps. Make it so it can be used by Apache, or Samba, or anything else running under UNIX.

    Even better, make it compatible with Spotlight. The search API's are diagrammed at a low enough level that it might be a part of Darwin and not Aqua and thereby released as Free Software. But if it isn't, Apple is pushing Spotlight very hard and they want developers to get behind it and use it, so the specification should be pretty open and reproducable.

  5. Where are the breakthroughs? by wandazulu · · Score: 4, Interesting

    This idea, while it sounds neat, also suggests that it's trying to keep up with the Spotlight feature of OSX Tiger and Longhorn's whatever-you-call-it. I'm not at all bashing the project, but what I'm curious about is why we haven't seen Linux leading in more advanced features, stuff that would be really advanced out-of-this-world concepts that will, eventually, someday, really advance our idea of computing.

    I'm sure that it's being done to some extent, I would think that if you're a Phd doing advanced windowing research, you'd want your platform to be Linux so that you can code it the way you want.

    While Linux is the natural choice to use for the breakthrough concepts, I really don't know of any. While Linux has *great* technology, and is definately an OS par excellence, it feels like it's more-or-less keeping up with the Joneses, instead of leading in new ideas and technologies. It's said that everyone waits for Apple to come up with something so that it can be copied. Well, why wait for them?

    Maybe there isn't as much research going on as I would think (not being in Academia), or it's more of the "faster-smaller" variety, but when the "next big thing" happens in computing, I hope it is on Linux *first*.