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2008-01-31
, 23:00
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Posts: 334 |
Thanked: 55 times |
Joined on Aug 2007
@ Eastern Ontario, Canada
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#2
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2008-02-01
, 00:02
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Posts: 118 |
Thanked: 59 times |
Joined on May 2007
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#4
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2008-02-01
, 01:57
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Posts: 282 |
Thanked: 69 times |
Joined on Dec 2007
@ Penniless Park, Fla.
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#5
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Interesting. Does this pre-date Hypercard?
I have often thought that something like Hypercard would a good fit for the tablet.
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2008-02-01
, 11:00
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Posts: 3,841 |
Thanked: 1,079 times |
Joined on Nov 2006
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#6
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2008-02-01
, 12:30
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Posts: 88 |
Thanked: 19 times |
Joined on Jan 2008
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#7
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The Following User Says Thank You to hyartep For This Useful Post: | ||
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2008-02-01
, 13:55
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Posts: 334 |
Thanked: 55 times |
Joined on Aug 2007
@ Eastern Ontario, Canada
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#8
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There used to be a quite good mac emulator for Linux etc. some years back, I'm sure there's still something out there.
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2008-02-01
, 14:13
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Posts: 1,950 |
Thanked: 1,174 times |
Joined on Jan 2008
@ Seattle, USA
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#9
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2008-02-01
, 15:06
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Posts: 334 |
Thanked: 55 times |
Joined on Aug 2007
@ Eastern Ontario, Canada
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#10
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And, yes, I have a 68k Mac version of QuickDex. It may take a bit for me to find it and get it into a PC so I can email it or post it somewhere. If that would be helpful, let me know here and I'll start digging.
The Following User Says Thank You to dont For This Useful Post: | ||
It had ONLY TWO FIELDS: a field where you typed text (which was automatically saved) and a field where you typed a character string for searching. The idea was (like Microsoft's Cardfile, which was not nearly as useful as QuickDex) that you had a "stack" of cards in a single file. The only really necessary commands are New Card, Delete Card, Find Forward and Find Backward. Clicking Find just jumps to and highlights the next occurrence of the character string in the saved text field. The view just changes to the next card that has that character string. If the Find field is left blank, then searching just pulls up each card in order. You can enter any random piece of knowledge, contacts' addresses, lists of bookmarks, lists of ToDos or movies you want to see, anything. It's a poor man's PIM.
Here is a screenshot of the current Windows version of QuickDex:
This newer, Windows version is more complicated than necessary. (Also, aesthetically, it would be nicer if the cards had rounded corners; and if the shape matched the Tablet's landscape screen format.)
I have tried all the existing programs that are similar to QuickDex. None offer the perfect simplicity and utility. And QuickDex ought to be easier to program.
Quicknote is the closest, but its Search function doesn't work, it doesn't have word-wrap, and the extra pane of hierarchical first lines is just unnecessary. MaemoPad+ doesn't seem to support search and it's more complicated than necessary. Notes doesn't act as a database, and allows only one "card" at time. Notecase is also unnecessarily complicated and doesn't offer a database search function across all its information either.
After an initial release, there could be advances like text formatting (font size, etc.) and the ability to open more than one file from within the program (so then you add commands for New File and Delete File). But what's essential is a place to store (and find) any and all information and take it on the road in the N800 or N810. Even early QuickDex had some bells and whistles, like a phone dialer. Later incarnations (like iData) added the capability to embed images. But None Of That Is Necessary. Just a simple place to throw in text info would be an AWESOME addition to the Nokia Tablets!
The utility of something like QuickDex is hard to overstate. These days I don't use it since I'm on Windows and I'm one of those inveterate users of EccoPro. But for Tablet use -- in terms of format, simplicity, memory footprint, utility -- I can't imagine a more useful, fo-far-non-existent program for the NIT.
Here's a little review of QuickDex from 1992. As the author points out, it uses only 20k and is lightning fast. http://tinyurl.com/3a5m8r
Last edited by GeraldKo; 2008-01-31 at 21:29.