Recommended Posts

Windows

Saved Search, which is Windows Vista's implementation of virtual folder, is physically just an XML file, which contains the search query, in a .search-ms file.

Saved Search, which is Windows Vista's implementation of virtual folder, is physically just an XML file, which contains the search query, in a .search-ms file.

In November 2006, Microsoft released Windows Vista which allows saving any search query as a Search Folder, which is a type of virtual folder. Whenever it is accessed the search is run and the results are presented as if a folder is being shown, with its contents being aliases to the actual files. The exception is that, in certain scenarios, the search is not run and a cached version of the folder is shown.

The same Saved Search approach exists in Windows XP with results generated quickly from an index when Windows Indexing Service is enabled and presented in a similar virtual folder. The search parameters can be saved as a .fnd file for Windows XP searches.

A virtual folder (saved search) is recognizable in Windows Vista by its distinctive icon and blue color. Saved searches can occur anywhere in the filesystem; however, for them to appear in the left hand navigation pane, they must be in a fixed location.

A virtual folder (saved search) is recognizable in Windows Vista by its distinctive icon and blue color. Saved searches can occur anywhere in the filesystem; however, for them to appear in the left hand navigation pane, they must be in a fixed location.

A Search Folder is just an XML file, which stores the query in a form that can be used by the Windows search subsystem. As such, it can be created anywhere in the filesystem wherever a normal file can be created, by saving a search from the Windows Search system. Whenever such files are accessed, the search is executed on the entire hard drive and the matches are aggregated and presented as a virtual folder.

In the early development builds of Windows Vista, there were some pre-configured Virtual Folders, for Music, Pictures, Documents and the like, which were used as replacement of their special folder counterpart. Windows Vista also supported manual creation of custom virtual folders. However, Microsoft felt that Virtual Folders will be too confusing to the general public and hence they are not being used as the replacement of physical folders, as was the original goal. Unlike in previous versions, where Start Menu icons led to Virtual Folders for Music, Pictures and Documents, build 5308 onwards lead to physical folders of same name, which are exactly like My Documents and other similar folders in Windows XP.

180px-Folders_Vista.png

A virtual folder (saved search) is recognizable in Windows Vista by its distinctive icon and blue color. Saved searches can occur anywhere in the filesystem; however, for them to appear in the left hand navigation pane, they must be in a fixed location.

from waki

hope that help

I think it might, they might integrate Mesh into Win7, we'll see. That would be great if they did.

I would absolutely love to see that happen. Live Mesh is an awesome platform. There's a few things that I think could use a tweak (so I actually started using Folder Share), but for the most part Mesh is great. Can't wait for the Mac version so all my boxes are synced.

I would absolutely love to see that happen. Live Mesh is an awesome platform. There's a few things that I think could use a tweak (so I actually started using Folder Share), but for the most part Mesh is great. Can't wait for the Mac version so all my boxes are synced.

And I cant wait for it to go international so that I can have it in Norway :crazy:

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Popular Now

  • Posts

    • All it does is use the CPU more efficiently during boot to speed up boot times. That's it. Yawn....
    • It's not a one or the other kind of thing. Software should run efficiently, and the operating system should appropriately manage the CPU clocks. You could have the best most optimized software on earth, and it will still run faster if the CPU does a better job of boosting as needed. All this is doing is pre-boosting the CPU based on user actions, instead of waiting for the normal detection mechanism to kick in. If the OS knows it is about to need more CPU, why shouldn't it use that knowledge? It's the same idea of downshifting before you try to pass someone, instead of just burying your foot into the peddle and waiting for the transmission to figure out what you want to do.
    • Audacity 3.7.8 by Razvan Serea Audacity is a free, open source digital audio editor and recording application. Edit your sounds using cut, copy, and paste features (with unlimited undo functionality), mix tracks, or apply effects to your recordings. The program also has a built-in amplitude-envelope editor, a customizable spectrogram mode, and a frequency-analysis window for audio-analysis applications. Built-in effects include bass boost, wah wah, and noise removal, and the program also supports VST plug-in effects. You can use Audacity to: Record live audio. Record computer playback on any Windows Vista or later machine. Convert tapes and records into digital recordings or CDs. Edit WAV, AIFF, FLAC, MP2, MP3 or Ogg Vorbis sound files. AC3, M4A/M4R (AAC), WMA and other formats supported using optional libraries. Cut, copy, splice or mix sounds together. Numerous effects including change the speed or pitch of a recording. Write your own plug-in effects with Nyquist. And more! See the complete list of features. Audacity 3.7.8 changelog: #10688 Fixed an exception thrown when pasting into a newly-created track (Thanks, David Bailes (@DavidBailes)!) #10870, #10884, #10775, #10629 Fixed tone generation, waveform-scale setting, SetClip Name parameter, and clip-boundary command names for scripting and macros (Thank you, David Bailes (@DavidBailes)!) #11106 Fixed the loading of presets for the Distortion effect (A million thanks, David Bailes (@DavidBailes)!) #10947 Fixed paste into an empty audio track not preserving the source sample rate (Thanks, Juan Gabriel Colonna (@juancolonna)!) #10776 Allowed AltGr modifier in label and clip name editing (Thanks, Davide Peressoni (@DPDmancul)!) #9938 Added options to choose where silence is truncated (start/middle/end) (Thanks, Noah Rosenfield (@nosenfield)!) #9935 Added Podcast 2.0 chapters JSON export for label tracks (Thanks, Noah Rosenfield (@nosenfield)!) #10103 Improve UI on HiDPI displays on Linux/wxGTK (Thanks, Ivan A. Melnikov (@iv-m)!) #10099 Fixed MixerBoard Mute and Solo button display (Thanks, Ivan A. Melnikov (@iv-m)!) #10681 Fixed multichannel FLAC import #10999 Fixed envelope being broken after joining clips Download: Audacity 64-bit | Standalone ~20.0 MB (Open Source) Download: Audacity 32-bit | Standalone Download: Audacity ARM64 | Standalone View: Audacity Home Page | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • There really isn't anything magical about the low latency profile, other OS's do this as well. All they're doing is using your CPUs boost clock options in a more smarter way.
    • So we shouldn't have the option because of people using their laptops on battery? OK? LOL
  • Recent Achievements

    • One Month Later
      Star Processing earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      Star Processing earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • One Year In
      Star Processing earned a badge
      One Year In
    • Week One Done
      FBSPL earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • One Year In
      Jim Dugan earned a badge
      One Year In
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      494
    2. 2
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      198
    3. 3
      +Edouard
      155
    4. 4
      Steven P.
      84
    5. 5
      ATLien_0
      69
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!