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- TidBITS#93/SFDialogers
- ======================
-
- Copyright 1990-1992 Adam & Tonya Engst. Non-profit, non-commercial
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- TidBITS -- 9301 Avondale Rd. NE Q1096 -- Redmond, WA 98052 USA
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Topics:
- SFDialog Extenders Details
- SFIntroduction
- Super Boomerang 3.0
- ShortCut 1.5
- KiwiFinder Extender 1.02
- DFaultD 2.22
-
-
- SFDialog Extenders Details
- --------------------------
-
- Super Boomerang 3.0
- ShortCut 1.5
- KiwiFinder Extender 1.02
- DFaultD 2.22
-
-
- SuperBoomerang 3.0
-
- Now Software
- 520 S.W. Harrison St. Suite 435
- Portland OR 97201
- 503/274-2800
- 71541.170@compuserve.com
- NOWSOFTWARE@applelink.apple.com
-
- Super Boomerang Rating:
- 10 Penguins out of a possible 10 (note that one or two of the
- user evaluations referred to previous versions of Super
- Boomerang)
-
- User Evaluation: (on a scale of 0 to 10)
- Number of responses: 10
- Ease of installation: 9
- Ease of learning: 8
- Ease of use: 9
- Power & usefulness: 10
- Documentation: 8
- Technical support: 6
- Overall evaluation: 9
-
-
- ShortCut 1.5
-
- Aladdin Systems, Inc.
- 165 Westridge Drive
- Watsonville CA 95076
- 408/761-6200
- aladdin@well.sf.ca.us
- 75016.325@compuserve.com
- ALADDIN on AOL
- ALADDIN@applelink.apple.com
-
- ShortCut Rating:
- 10 Penguins out of a possible 10 (we don't do decimal Penguins
- or ShortCut would have only rated slightly lower, like .1
- Penguin. Unfortunately we got no user evaluations for ShortCut.)
-
-
- KiwiFinder Extender 1.02
-
- Kiwi Software
- 6546 Pardall Road
- Santa Barbara CA 93117-4843
- 805/685-4031
- 73207.1276@compuserve.com
- KiwiSoft on AOL
- D0862@applelink.apple.com
-
- KiwiFinder Rating:
- 3 Penguins out of a possible 10 (this is especially since the
- program will no longer be updated. Unfortunately we got no user
- evaluations for KiwiFinder.)
-
-
- DFaultD 2.22
-
- Jon Gotow
- 129 Iron Run Road
- Bethel Park, PA 15102
- jong@k.gp.cs.cmu.edu
- 72330.3455@compuserve.com
- J.GOTOW on GEnie
-
- DFaultD Rating:
- 8 Penguins out of a possible 10
-
- User Evaluation: (on a scale of 0 to 10)
- Number of responses: 4
- Ease of installation: 10
- Ease of learning: 8
- Ease of use: 10
- Power & usefulness: 9
- Documentation: 9
- Technical support: 10
- Overall evaluation: 9
-
-
- Price and Availability:
- Super Boomerang and ShortCut are widely available from dealers and
- mail order firms, and MacConnection sells them for $84 (only in
- the Now Utilities package) and $45 respectively. KiwiFinder
- Extender may no longer be readily available (see review below) but
- DFaultD is widely available as shareware for $20. (We quote the
- MacConnection price in recognition of its industry-leading efforts
- to use ecologically-conscious packaging and its overall excellent
- service.)
-
-
- Reviewer:
- Adam C. Engst, TidBITS Editor
-
-
- SFIntroduction
- --------------
- When I first used Boomerang 2.0, I was in second heaven. Finally,
- a utility that watched what I did and helped out on its own later!
- I immediately whipped off an article for the local users' group
- praising Boomerang to the skies and went on to use Boomerang
- happily. By then Super Boomerang was almost ready to be released
- and I suffered through the dilemma of whether to send in my
- shareware fee for Boomerang or to purchase the Now Utilities 2.0
- which included Super Boomerang. Now solved my dilemma by sending
- me the Now Utilities complete with Super Boomerang to review, and
- I settled into Super Boomerang even more happily than before. I
- don't know if the shareware upgrade path still applies, but if
- not, Super Boomerang is only available as part of the Now
- Utilities, a collection of system enhancements that we reviewed in
- TidBITS#45.
-
- Just before I published the Now Utilities review, Ken Hancock and
- I had put together a comparison of the major compression programs,
- including Aladdin's StuffIt Deluxe. When the nice people at
- Aladdin read our review, they asked me if I wanted a copy of
- StuffIt Deluxe to test (Ken had done all the testing for that
- issue) and while they were at it, would I like a beta copy of
- ShortCut 1.5? Like most of you, I am almost completely incapable
- of turning down software, especially from a company as classy as
- Aladdin, so I said, sure, send them along, it can't add
- significantly to the confusion.
-
- When I received the beta of ShortCut, I immediately installed it
- and almost as quickly uninstalled it because it was still a bit
- unstable, being in beta release. A couple of months later, Aladdin
- sent me the release version, which I again installed immediately
- and which has been running quite happily ever since even with
- Super Boomerang also installed. So now I found myself in the
- position of having to choose between two extremely useful
- utilities, either of which I would have been happy with alone.
- Yes, I know, I get no sympathy, but there is strong emotional
- pressure to say nice things about software that you get for free.
- I'm going to yield to that pressure happily and say nice things
- about both programs, but I must admit that I have to give the nod
- to Super Boomerang at the moment, but that's only because I don't
- use StuffIt archives all that much other than to send out files to
- the nets. I'm anxiously waiting to see Aladdin's SpaceMaker, since
- that might increase my usage of StuffIt-format archives, although
- I'm sure Lloyd Chambers of Salient will have AutoDoubler more or
- less done by then too.
-
- After I'd had Super Boomerang and ShortCut for a little while,
- Kiwi Software sent along a copy of KiwiFinder Extender, yet
- another SFDialog (Standard File Dialog box, the dialog from which
- you open and save files) box extender. In addition, DFaultD, a
- shareware SFDialog enhancement utility recently made its way to my
- Mac, so I'm including it as well. Gee, and this was supposed to be
- a quick issue. :-)
-
- John Nixon, one of the people who responded to our request for
- comments on these utilities, included a whole list of utilities
- that modify the SFDialog box, and although we don't have time to
- review them all, here are the utilities he mentioned. Greg's
- Buttons is a $10 shareware product that makes buttons appear in
- 3-D but has some incompatibilities. Escapade is an excellent
- freeware utility from Christopher Wysocki that enables Cut, Copy,
- and Paste in dialogs, and allows the user to hit a single key to
- answer a dialog. Finally comes Open-wide from James Walker, a
- "postcardware" utility that expands the size of the SFDialog box
- so you can see the entire name at all times. Also mentioned by
- Jonathan Brecher was the old SFScroll INIT, which implements only
- the "Rebound" feature of Super Boomerang and ShortCut and which
- apparently still works under System 7.
-
-
- Super Boomerang 3.0
- -------------------
- As I said earlier, the beauty of Super Boomerang is the way it
- works behind your back to make your life easier. Hiro Yamamoto,
- the author, has done an excellent job of thinking about how people
- use files and ways that the most commonly used files can be
- brought to the forefront easily. Initially Boomerang used a pop-up
- menu from a little boomerang button next to the disk name, but
- installing that button occasionally caused problems for some
- programs that wanted to mess around with the SFDialog. In Super
- Boomerang 2.0, Hiro retained all of the features of Boomerang and
- added some significant new ones. Now, in Super Boomerang 3.0, the
- extension has become even more powerful without becoming harder to
- use.
-
- Primary among Super Boomerang 2.0's features was the hierarchical
- Open... menu, called DirectOpen, in each application's File menu.
- The DirectOpen menu contains a list of recently opened files that
- that particular application can open (so TEXT files of all types
- show up in Nisus's Open... menu no matter what the creator). I'm
- generally not all that fond of hierarchical menus because I find
- them more difficult to navigate than I'd like, but Super
- Boomerang's DirectOpen menu is the program's main advantage over
- ShortCut because it allows me to avoid the SFDialog box entirely.
- The main new feature in Super Boomerang 3.0 (aside from the much
- improved find file function, more later) is the installation of a
- hierarchical Super Boomerang menu item in the Apple menu. This
- long hierarchical menu is quite clumsy, since it alphabetically
- lists all your recently visited folders and files (you can choose
- which come first) with the accessible ones differentiated by
- larger icons. You can select files directly from the list, but
- folders have an additional level of hierarchy, listing the files
- and folders one level down. You can open files inside those
- folders, but if you select a folder, Super Boomerang will switch
- to the Finder and open that folder. I like this new feature and I
- find it useful on occasion since it allows me to avoid searching
- around in the Finder even more, but it really shows the
- limitations of the slow and clumsy hierarchical menu system.
- Someone has to come up with a better idea.
-
- The other enhancement that has appeared in Super Boomerang 2.0 and
- stuck around in 3.0 is an improved interface. Instead of the
- little boomerang button, Hiro now installs a menu bar at the top
- of the SFDialog box. The first item (at the left) is the little
- boomerang, and much like the Apple menu, it contains the About...
- and Help... items. The next two menus, Folder and File, hold up to
- 30 of the folders and files most recently used. The Drive menu
- simply lists the mounted drives, and selecting a drive changes the
- SFDialog box so that you can see the contents of the last accessed
- folder on that drive. The next menu, Options, holds most of Super
- Boomerang's ancillary features, so I'll hold off on that for a
- minute while I discuss the last menu, Group. Super Boomerang
- allows you to create up to five groups of applications. When a
- given group is selected, only the files and folders belonging to
- programs in that group show in the File and Folder menus. The idea
- behind this is that you could create a group of graphics programs,
- and all of their recent files and folders would be the same and
- would be unsullied by spreadsheet files.
-
- The Options menu has three sections, the first devoted to utility
- functions, the second to managing the folder and file lists, and
- the last to configuring Super Boomerang. The first four items, the
- utility functions, are Find..., Edit..., New Folder..., and Show
- Info. Find is relatively self-explanatory, but it is among the
- faster Find functions available on the Mac. Until I saw other
- recent utilities such as MasterFinder and ShortCut 1.5, I thought
- that Super Boomerang was unique in its speed. In addition, Super
- Boomerang 3.0 can now search for files inside StuffIt,
- DiskDoubler, and Compact Pro archives, and can search for text
- strings inside uncompressed files. I haven't done any rigorous
- testing, but it appears that Super Boomerang's text searching is
- the fastest around. Along with the hierarchical Open... menu,
- Super Boomerang's ability to search for text within files is
- another the reason why I like it slightly more than ShortCut.
-
- Back in the Options menu, Edit provides a Finder-like list of the
- files in the current folder, and allows you to duplicate, rename,
- or delete any file, and, if possible, you can open a file as well.
- This feature is especially helpful for non-MultiFinder users
- running System 6. New Folder... creates a new folder and allows
- you to name it. Show Info, the final option, is a toggle that can
- display information about the selected file at the bottom of the
- SFDialog box. For files, it shows modified date, creator and type,
- as well as the data and resource fork sizes. Folders merely get
- modification date and number of enclosed files and folders. I
- suspect keeping Show Info turned on slows down the opening of the
- SFDialog slightly, but I like the information enough that it's
- worth it. The second section of the Options menu allows you add a
- file or folder to the appropriate menu permanently (at which point
- it is underlined in the menu) or clear either the file or folder
- menu completely to start over. Adding files and folders
- permanently is a nice shortcut when combined with the Transfer
- QuicKey in QuicKeys2. Just make a file permanent with Super
- Boomerang, pop up the SFDialog box and select the file. QuicKeys
- will then find the application and open the file. The last set of
- three items in the Options menu contains Configure..., Hot
- Keys..., and Preferences..., all of which combine to let you
- customize how you use Super Boomerang.
-
- There are also a few little features that work well behind the
- scenes and are easily forgotten, though extremely useful. Super
- Boomerang can use what it calls Rebound, where it goes back to the
- file or folder you last accessed in the SFDialog box. Rebound
- prevents you from tearing out your hair scrolling down to the
- files that start with "t" each time because if a file starting
- with "t" is the last file opened, that's where the list will start
- the next time. If you want, Super Boomerang can alphabetize the
- recent files and folders, but I find that confusing and prefer the
- chronological sorting (recent ones at the top). If you have a file
- with a very long name, Super Boomerang can shrink it so that you
- can read more of it, and finally, if you have a number of drives
- or partitions, Super Boomerang can identify which disk a file
- lives on in the hierarchical menu, a feature which can be useful
- if you work with similarly named files on different volumes.
-
- Super Boomerang has good online help, and although it is context
- sensitive to the dialog box open at the time, it's not as
- graphical or as nice-looking as ShortCut's online help system.
- When you have a question, though, it does the job. The
- documentation doesn't do justice to all that Super Boomerang can
- do, but that didn't bother most people as much as Now's apparently
- mediocre technical support. Now does have several email addresses,
- but several people expressed dissatisfaction with them, and Now's
- phone support also got mixed reactions.
-
- So that's Super Boomerang. Perhaps the most telling fact about it
- is the number of survey respondents who used a phrase something
- along the lines of "I can't live with Super Boomerang on any Mac I
- use." I'll admit freely that I mostly use the recent files from
- the DirectOpen menu along with the recent folders in the SFDialog
- box itself, but I do appreciate the other features, most notably
- Find..., New Folder..., and Show Info. One thing I appreciate,
- although I don't know how Hiro does it, is Super Boomerang's
- ability to add just about anything to its Open... menu. If you
- double-click on a file in the Finder, even that gets added. The
- only way of opening a file that doesn't add it to the menu that
- I've found is using Nisus's Catalog, which completely bypasses the
- SFDialog (and which I don't use as much as I would if it had a
- boomerang feature). The only negatives in Super Boomerang are that
- it does slow down the SFDialog opening up and that it can conflict
- with other extensions. Some people have reported problems with it,
- although others (including me) have found it extremely solid. Lots
- of people also expressed interest in being able to buy just Super
- Boomerang without the accompanying Now Utilities.
-
-
- ShortCut 1.5
- ------------
- Like the original Boomerang, ShortCut installs a little button to
- the left of the drive name for its menu to pop up from. Unlike
- Boomerang, the 'hot' area extends to the entire drive name, which
- makes it easier to select than Boomerang's original little
- boomerang button. ShortCut's menu drops straight down from the
- drive name, first listing the mounted volumes so you can go to
- them directly. Selecting the drive from the menu takes you to the
- top level of that drive, not to the last folder accessed as does
- selecting a drive name from Super Boomerang's Drive menu.
-
- After the drive names, ShortCut's first four items are similar to
- Super Boomerang's. The first item is New Folder..., which lets you
- name and create a new folder. The only difference between the two
- here is that Super Boomerang automatically puts you into the
- folder you create, whereas ShortCut has a checkbox that lets you
- toggle that option when you name the folder. I've never wanted to
- create a folder and not be in it, but it's nice of Aladdin to give
- the user the choice. Next come Go To Folder and Open File, which
- work exactly as Super Boomerang's Folder and File menus, keeping
- track of the most recently accessed files and folders. My only
- quibble with the way these are implemented is that because I like
- to keep track of about 25 or 30 recent files, the hierarchical
- menus attached to Go To Folder and Open File can become quite
- unwieldy. At the bottom of those menus are options to add or
- remove a file or folder permanently or purge the recent files.
- ShortCut also separates the permanent folders and files from the
- recent ones, unlike Super Boomerang, which sorts them together and
- underlines the permanent ones. The fourth option is Fast Find...,
- which works much like Super Boomerang's but runs slightly slower
- (in the tests that I ran). For example, I asked both to search for
- all the files that Nisus could open with the letters 'sun' in the
- title. Super Boomerang found the one file that matched in four
- seconds, ShortCut in seven, neither of which is bad on a 105 MB
- hard disk with several thousand files. ShortCut can narrow the
- search more than Super Boomerang, because it can limit the results
- to a date range using either or both the created and modified
- dates. ShortCut can also find files whose names contain the search
- string, match the search string, or begin or end with the search
- string, but Super Boomerang uses an asterisk as a wildcard
- pattern, which accomplishes the same thing. The main advantage
- ShortCut has over Super Boomerang 2.0 here is that ShortCut can
- also search inside StuffIt archives, which is extremely useful if
- you store lots of files in archives. More on this in a bit.
-
- After those items, ShortCut and Super Boomerang diverge somewhat.
- ShortCut's next menu item is Get Info..., which displays a Get
- Info box much like the Finder's, but with more information and the
- ability to change the file's or folder's name. You can also change
- file creators and types, as well as flip the locked bit. If you
- want to get destructive, ShortCut includes a Trash button that
- will delete the selected file. ShortCut's next command is
- Volumes... which is slightly strange. It brings up a list of the
- mounted volumes and gives some basic information about them.
- However, in that dialog box are radio buttons for Folders and
- Files, both of which list your most recent folders and files, as
- you'd expect. I'm not quite sure of the utility of this, since
- short of the disk space information ShortCut gives in the volume
- list, you can get the same thing from the hierarchical menus. My
- suspicion is that this list is for diehard keyboard users since
- you can type command-O, command-V, command-O and see the list of
- your recently-visited files. It also works as a QuicKeys sequence
- for the lazier people among us.
-
- Aladdin is one of the leading companies in using small software
- modules whose features are available to multiple programs. This
- gave ShortCut a significant edge over Super Boomerang 2.0 because
- ShortCut can deal with StuffIt Deluxe archives transparently. If
- you want to open a file down several levels in an archive, no
- problem. In addition if you own StuffIt Deluxe, ShortCut 1.5 has
- the ability to Stuff files directly from the SFDialog box by
- merely checking a box at the bottom of the dialog. This is useful
- if you want to send a copy of a file to someone via email because
- you just do your final save with that box checked, and poof,
- you've got a standard StuffIt Deluxe archive. The Stuff... item in
- ShortCut's menu allows you to stuff the selected item or another
- item by pulling up another SFDialog box with a list of all files
- and folders, visible or not. This secondary SFDialog also includes
- a truncated ShortCut menu with the drive names and the Go To
- Folder and Open File items. This may seem like overkill, layering
- one SFDialog inside another, but it works well and isn't confusing
- to use. You can pick among the compression types supported by
- StuffIt Deluxe and choose whether the original item should be left
- or deleted when you're done. This is one of the most useful
- features of ShortCut, and is a strong argument for owning both
- ShortCut and StuffIt Deluxe.
-
- Super Boomerang 3.0 approaches ShortCut's abilities in reading
- files, since it can find files inside compressed files created by
- StuffIt Deluxe, DiskDoubler, and Compact Pro. Super Boomerang has
- no ability to compress files, although if you open a file in a
- compressed DiskDoubler file, DiskDoubler will recompress it later
- if you have that option set in DiskDoubler itself. Do note that
- although Super Boomerang can search for files inside compressed
- StuffIt and DiskDoubler files, if you don't own StuffIt or
- DiskDoubler (or have the shareware StuffIt Classic or DDExpand
- applications), you won't be able to expand the file (not
- surprisingly). Super Boomerang does come with an extractor for
- Compact Pro, so you can always extract files compressed by Compact
- Pro. Although Super Boomerang has a bit more breadth in dealing
- with all three compression formats, it can't look at the files
- inside compressed files as ShortCut can.
-
- ShortCut's abilities to transparently work with StuffIt archives
- and to create them give it the edge here, especially since Super
- Boomerang's text searching feature does not work within compressed
- files.
-
- Sometimes you don't want to open a file but you do want to quickly
- see what it looks like. For that purpose, ShortCut includes a
- View... command that displays (and allows copying) any TEXT or
- PICT item that is selected. This uses the same viewer technology
- that's built into StuffIt Deluxe. When you view a file you get a
- modal window the size of the screen that has a scroll bar for
- scrolling through the 32K of text or the picture, and various
- menus to change how it looks and copy things. You can't change
- anything in the View window, but that's not the point.
-
- Unlike Super Boomerang, which provides the separate Edit... dialog
- for deleting files, ShortCut provides the Trash... command right
- in the menu. It can delete the file you currently have selected or
- will pull up a secondary SFDialog box and allow you to select
- another file. In addition, Trash... includes options to Erase Disk
- (Fast), Erase Disk (Reinitialize), and Empty Trash. These options
- only work with floppies, which is good since being able to whomp
- on a hard disk like that would make me nervous. In addition, if
- you aren't comfortable with just trashing your files, you can use
- Shred..., which makes sure that the file will be unrecoverable,
- should some unpleasant industrial spies be after your electronic
- garbage.
-
- Overall, ShortCut 1.5 emerges as a slightly quirkier program than
- Super Boomerang, but one which will provide an incredible boost in
- productivity, especially if you work with a lot of files every
- day. I can't recommend that you use both Super Boomerang and
- ShortCut, as I've been doing for testing, because the SFDialog box
- opens more slowly with both installed. However, in my humble
- opinion, everyone should have either Super Boomerang or ShortCut.
- Super Boomerang's main advantages are the DirectOpen menu, the
- Super Boomerang item in the Apple menu, and the ability to search
- for text inside files and to search for file names inside
- compressed files. ShortCut's main advantages are transparent
- access to StuffIt Deluxe archives, the ability to stuff files from
- the SFDialog box, the ability to view a file before opening it,
- and the powerful file and floppy erasing options. Both have been
- fairly stable and incredibly addictive, to judge from reports on
- the nets.
-
- So which should you buy? Don't ask me, I don't know. Just buy one
- or the other, but keep in mind that although you get the rest of
- the Now Utilities with Super Boomerang, ShortCut is a bit cheaper.
- That's the problem with life, decisions like this aren't easy to
- make.
-
-
- KiwiFinder Extender 1.02
- ------------------------
- Since we also have KiwiFinder Extender, this seemed like a good
- place to talk about it. Like Super Boomerang and ShortCut,
- KiwiFinder enhances the SFDialog box. Unlike them, it also comes
- with an application and with numerous methods of customizing the
- organization of your files. However, I cannot recommend KiwiFinder
- currently because of the letter we just received from Kiwi
- Software. Apparently the demand for KiwiFinder has been quite weak
- and Kiwi has decided to cease development on future versions.
- Although I'm disappointed to hear this because KiwiFinder had a
- great deal of potential for certain users (and Kiwi claims that
- KiwiFinder runs fine under System 7, though we've had some
- problems, especially when another SFDialog utility is running), I
- thoroughly applaud Kiwi for the way they are handling the
- situation. First, they sent out a nice letter explaining the
- situation very clearly, and second, they are offering their new
- utility, Kiwi Power Windows to all registered users of KiwiFinder
- for free. We'll be sure to write about Kiwi Power Windows once
- we've had a chance to look at it. Meanwhile, my condolences to
- Kiwi for KiwiFinder's lack of success and wishes for better luck
- in the future. We need more companies that will go that far out of
- their way to keep customers happy.
-
- If you are the sort who can remember that you created a file last
- November and that it had the word Turkey in the title (but you
- can't remember anything else, not even what word processor you
- used) then you are the sort who might save a lot of time by
- installing KiwiFinder. On the other hand, if you are one of those
- compulsively organized types, KiwiFinder will allow you to be even
- more organized than you ever dreamed. For example, KiwiFinder lets
- you organize your files by project, attach keywords to files for
- future use, and attach notes to files (this one's due by the 31st,
- and be sure that Sue sees it before sending out the final draft,
- etc.). So, whether you are extremely organized or extremely
- unorganized KiwiFinder has something to offer you.
-
- KiwiFinder has two parts. The first part, KiwiFinder Manager,
- allows you to accomplish some hard disk maintenance and KiwiFinder
- setup tasks. Those that use KiwiFinder often will be more likely
- to spend time in this program, tweaking the organization of their
- hard disk. The second part, KiwiFinder INIT, shows its face in the
- SFDialog boxes. I'm not going to attempt to explain how every
- single interface details works and where it is located. Suffice to
- say that I found the interface reasonably intuitive for navigating
- through basic tasks, and a quick read through the short and
- clearly written manual uncovered the details.
-
- KiwiFinder Manager and KiwiFinder INIT look very similar, showing
- you a list of folders and files in a scrolling list on the left.
- To the right are pop-up menus that control which drive you're
- looking at, what files are filtered out, and the order in which
- they're sorted. Below those menus is another scrolling window that
- can either show you the location of the selected file from the
- main list or the notes that you've attached to that file. Below
- these items are buttons to Find a specific file, search for a
- group of files that meet a certain criteria, and Open the selected
- file. Both the INIT and the application give some basic file
- information, such as created and modified dates, creator and type,
- etc.
-
- Unlike ShortCut and Super Boomerang, which work on primarily on
- the fly, recording only the most recent files and folders you've
- visited, KiwiFinder has to prepare the disk first by indexing the
- files on it in. This process can take a while and the wait cursor
- even looks like a cup of coffee. Get one while you do this - it
- can take anywhere from a minute or two on a small, fast hard disk
- to many minutes on a large hard disk hooked to a slow Mac. The
- files that KiwiFinder creates aren't small either - the folder of
- KiwiFinder's files on my 20 MB files partition (450 files) takes
- up almost 260K. Although KiwiFinder is aimed directly at those
- with large hard disks and lots of files, you had better have a bit
- of free space as well. I intentionally avoided cataloguing my
- System partition because I'm running a little low on fee space in
- that partition.
-
- Once KiwiFinder has catalogued a disk, you can begin using the
- program. The primary feature of KiwiFinder is that you can change
- the way you view your files from the standard folder-based
- hierarchical view. KiwiFinder offers seven alternative views:
- Name, Type, Creator, Created Date, Modified Date, Folder (which is
- no different than the normal view), and Keywords. The idea is that
- by looking at your files in a different way, you'll be able to
- work with them more efficiently. For instance, in Name view, you
- see a folder corresponding to each first letter used in a file
- name. This means that you'll get a folder for files that start
- with a bullet, for instance. Name view reveals that I have no
- files on my disk starting with Q and most of the files start with
- C or T (not surprising, since the files I write the TidBITS copy
- in all start with "Copy" and most other TidBITS files start with
- "TidBITS"). Name view obviously won't help me much since I already
- know that most files start with C or T. Type and Creator views
- don't help much either, since I know most of the files are created
- by Nisus and HyperCard and are thus TEXT and STAK. KiwiFinder does
- handle this well by mapping understandable names onto some of the
- four-letter type and creator codes and allowing you to customize
- that mapping further. Modified and Create Date don't help much
- either, since I create a lot of files in a month. For both of the
- Date views, you get a list of year folders, each of which has
- appropriate month folders inside. Inside those are the files,
- again listed in the order that you have selected in the Sort
- pop-up menu. Incidently, you can sort files on Name, Modified or
- Create Date, or Size. Folder view isn't terribly helpful since
- it's no different than the normal view of files. Perhaps the most
- useful of all the views is Keyword view, since that will filter
- files based on keywords you've assigned. My problem with this is
- that if you are installing KiwiFinder on a full hard disk, it's a
- lot of work to assign keywords to old files, even with the clever
- input devices KiwiFinder provides. Assigning keywords to new files
- would be much easier, since KiwiFinder installs a Keywords button
- and a Notes button into the Save As... dialog box. Creating and
- adding keywords and notes from there is a good idea and far easier
- than adding them in bulk.
-
- You can also either Find files on the currently selected disk (it
- would be nice to be able to change the disk from within the Find
- and Search dialog boxes) or Search for a files matching up to
- three flexible AND/OR criteria formed from the various ways
- KiwiFinder can view files. The search runs extremely quickly since
- KiwiFinder indexes the drive and maintains that index. KiwiFinder
- places the results in a dialog box that looks a good deal like
- Apple's old Find File utility, and double-clicking on a file from
- that dialog will open the file.
-
- In some ways, I feel bad about KiwiFinder. One the one hand, it
- has an excellent manual and a generally good interface that
- doesn't use massive hierarchical menus. On the other hand, I don't
- use it because it doesn't help me with the way I want to organize
- my disk. I've also had a number of problems that might be related
- to using System 7 or conflicts with other extensions. KiwiFinder
- is very good about allowing you to limit it if you are using an
- application that doesn't like what KiwiFinder does, and if I were
- to use KiwiFinder a lot, that feature would be extremely nice. As
- it stands, KiwiFinder is a nice idea for power users with tons of
- poorly organized files, but I can't recommend it for the average
- user who just wants the Mac to be easier to use.
-
-
- DFaultD 2.22
- ------------
- In the shareware arena, DFaultD provides a number of useful
- functions at the reasonable price of $20. Jon Gotow originally
- intended DFaultD to assign a default folder to an application, so
- you could easily switch to this folder when you open or save a
- file. Normally on the Macintosh if you start up Nisus with no
- documents, as I often do via a QuicKey, when I use the Open...
- menu item, the SFDialog box displays the Nisus folder when it
- comes up. Needless to say, like most people, I don't store my
- documents in the same folder as the application, so if I had set
- up DFaultD beforehand, I could hit a command key or select an item
- from a pop-up menu and DFaultD would automatically move me to that
- folder. Along with that ability, Jon programmed DFaultD to
- optionally display a list of the last ten folders that the user
- has visited along with a number of folders that are "locked" in
- the menu - permanent folders that you want to use frequently in
- numerous applications.
-
- DFaultD uses a pop-up menu interface vaguely reminiscent of
- ShortCut's pop-up menu. However, DFaultD's two small buttons only
- replace the volume name when you move the mouse on top of the
- name. Before that, a small icon to the left of the name reminds
- you that DFaultD is active. The first button, which looks like a
- small folder, lists your default folder for that application if it
- has one, the ten most recently visited folders, and any locked
- folders you may have. Selecting one of these folders will take you
- to it immediately. At the bottom of the folder menu is a New
- Folder option, which simply creates a new folder where you are
- currently located. The other button, which looks like a small
- disk, displays a list of volume names. Selecting one of these will
- take you to that disk, with the added feature that DFaultD
- remembers where you last were on that disk, so you don't always
- end up at the desktop.
-
- Setting up a linkset, a list of applications and their default
- folders, is so easy that I'm not going to bother to say anything
- more about it. In fact, adding locked folders is equally as easy.
- DFaultD's customization interface can only be accessed from the
- Control Panel, which is one of DFaultD's few limitations - I would
- have liked to be able to set default folders right from within the
- SFDialog box. The only confusing part of DFaultD is that you can
- create multiple linksets so different people can have their own
- default folders. It took me a few minutes before I realized that
- linksets could be very similar and that the operative one was the
- one which was hilited. It isn't hard to figure out, but the
- otherwise clear documentation doesn't explain this simple fact.
-
- You can modify a few preferences for DFaultD as well. If you want,
- DFaultD will show its cursor while it draws the SFDialog so you
- can get a sense of how much system time DFaultD takes up. If you
- don't want to see that cursor, you can shut it off. Similarly, if
- you don't want to see the pop-up menus, you can shut them off too,
- but if you do that you will want to enable the option that lets
- the command key equivalent operate even without the menu active.
- You don't have to have the ten most recently visited folders
- listed, and finally, you can set which command key will switch you
- to the default folder.
-
- Overall, I rather like DFaultD. It is simple, well thought out,
- and easy to use. It doesn't pretend to do everything but performs
- its stated task well. However, I won't be using it because I find
- it a bit too limited. I do a lot of moving around on my hard disk
- and only ten recent folders simply isn't enough. I'd like to be
- able to increase that number. Similarly, I often prefer in Super
- Boomerang or ShortCut to just go directly to a file rather than to
- the folder that the files lives in. DFaultD can't record the most
- recently used files, and it doesn't have an option to assign a
- default file to an application either. If you think the feature
- lists of ShortCut and Super Boomerang are too much to deal with,
- you should look at DFaultD. Since it's shareware, you should be
- able to find it easily at your favorite source of shareware
- software. It's well worth the $20. However, I think that most
- people will be somewhat better served by either Super Boomerang or
- ShortCut, finances permitting.
-
-
- ..
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