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Apple lets Tiger out of bag


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Spotlight on search
Tiger addresses both problems with a search technology, called Spotlight, that also enables a new way of organization, called Smart Folders.

Accessed by clicking small magnifying glass icon, search results fill in as you type keywords. Spotlight doesn’t just search filenames. It also looks inside files — into a document’s text, a picture’s caption or tags linked to a music file, for instance.

Spotlight’s speed, even on my older Power Mac, is impressive. Results were on target, too.

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Like the desktop search tools available on Windows PCs from Yahoo, Google and MSN, Spotlight relies on an index that’s created when it’s first installed. Instead of having to scour an entire drive in search of something, it just looks it up in the database.

Indexing with Windows add-ons is a more computer-intensive process. Most are smart enough to do their work only when you’re not working on something, but that means new information isn’t always available. I have also found their range of files to be limited.

After the initial index is built in Tiger, changes are made to it whenever a file is changed — whether it’s saved, deleted, moved or modified in another way. I noticed no performance hit and, despite my repeated attempts to trick it, Spotlight never missed a file change.

I actually found myself using Spotlight to launch programs.

And there’s more. Searches can be saved and the results turned into folders that run a query each time they’re opened, fine-tuned to display only certain types of files. Time variables can also be set.

There is room for some improvement, however.

Spotlight only searches for files on the local computer, not networked hard drives or remote shared folders. Network file searching is something that’s expected in Longhorn, and Apple hasn’t ruled it out as a future feature.

People PC
Tiger — like previous versions of Mac OS X — also sets the bar high in the graphics display area.

In its “Dashboard,” small programs called “Widgets” overlay the screen at the punch of a button. They display information as the weather, stock prices, flight information and calendar info. More can be added, and they pop open with a rippling flourish.

But Tiger is about a lot more than look and feel. It’s also about looking at more people than ever on your video screen live.

With Apple’s iSight camera ($149) and Tiger’s new built-in iChat AV program, you can set up and participate in video conferences with 10 people. It’s visually stunning, with each person showing up in a panel, their animated faces reflecting against a black background.

Of course, it’s impossible to judge how Tiger will compare with the next-generation of Windows since Longhorn isn’t available.

As more details come out, additional complaints of Microsoft copying Mac OS X will surely be heard.

Both Apple and Microsoft are trying to address the same problems: sifting more quickly through more and more data. The onus is now on Bill Gates & Co. to see if it can one-up Steve Jobs’ shop.

© 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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