Google to Launch Mac Version of Google Desktop UPDATED 173
phaedo00 writes "Arstechnica is reporting that Google today announced that they are pursuing a Google Desktop for Apple's Mac OS X. Google chief executive Eric Schmidt saying it had to be rebuilt from the ground up because of the fundamental differences between the Mac OS and Windows. 'We intend to do it,' Schmidt said." Update: 10/30 23:51 GMT by M : Seems like Reuters and others may have heard wrong about a potential Mac version.
Spotlight? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Spotlight? (Score:1)
Re:Spotlight? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Spotlight? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Spotlight? (Score:3, Funny)
Typical Apple Fanatic's Take... (Score:1, Interesting)
Don't you guys ever think... "man, more competition...maybe Apple will offer me more next time around to compete with google"
Or
"Wow, I really like this new google desktop search engine. I think I'll use it"
Sometimes I think apple could offer crap on a stick and you fanatics would buy it and defend it just because Apple told you to.
Oh, and before you ask, I own 5 Macs, including a pair of powerbooks, a G5, and 2 iMacs, but get a little real here.
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Typical Apple Fanatic's Take... (Score:5, Informative)
Disclaimer: I've used GDS beta on Windows, and I've used Spotlight on the Tiger WWDC preview. I'm sure what both companies will offer in sucessive versions will be more advanced.
GDS on Windows is a nice idea that's limited by the small number of data formats that it supports. The only file formats it understands are the ones specifically baked into it by Google. There is no way (at current) for a developer to add support for custom file formats, nor does it give you any way to exploit the metadata already present in many very common file formats (e.g. JPEG, PNG, MP3, etc.) In other words, if I had a 1024x768 picture of a Porsche 911 called "Porsche 911.jpg" on my HD, I could find it with GDS by searching for "porsche" or "911" or ".jpg". On the plus side, the formats that Google already knows about (eg AIM logs, Outlook [gack] emails) are well-supported.
Spotlight, however, indexes the inbuilt metadata as well, so not only could I search on parts of the filename, as above, I could also search for "picture files that are 1024 x 768" or have "epson" in their EXIF tags. In addition, if I write a graphics app and use "marmoset's magnificent graphics format" (MMGF) as my native storage format, I can write a Spotlight plugin that tells the OS how to understand the "underpants gnome" tags I've embedded in the images.
Re:Typical Apple Fanatic's Take... (Score:2, Interesting)
A.
Re:Typical Apple Fanatic's Take... (Score:2)
so, yah, my 2 120Gb hard drives with 20 Gb available on them now was being searched by spotlight with ease.
Re:Typical Apple Fanatic's Take... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Spotlight? (Score:2)
Dominic Giampaolo used to work at Google (in fact, many of the indexing approaches taken by Spotlight are based on his experiences there.)
Eric Schmidt is saying that it's a complete rewrite. Re-engineered for a completely different environment.
Google's smart enough to leverage the good bits of the OS. My money would be on them using Spotlight intelligently and hooking the local index (created by Giampaolo & Co.) with the global index (created by Schmidt & Co.)
Linux (Score:3, Interesting)
Of course, most of the world doesn't care, so it wouldn't be likely 2 happen.
Re:Linux (Score:1)
there's allot of flavors of linux/unix, so it might be handy if they have some experience from doing it good on other systems first.
Re:Linux (Score:5, Informative)
Current list of supported formats in addition to HTML include TeX, DVI, PS, full text, mail, man pages, news, troff, WordPerfect, RTF, Microsoft Word/Excel, SGML, C sources and many more. Stubs for PDF support is included in Harvest and will use Xpdf or Acroread to process PDF files. Adding support for new format is easy due to Harvest's modular design.
There are a few others, do your own homework if you want themRe:Linux (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Linux (Score:5, Informative)
You do realize that Google has very much mastered linux ? After all, Linux does power their 15,000+ cluster
Sunny Dubey
Re:Linux (Score:2)
Linux version won't please (Score:2, Funny)
Besides, it's also way too easy to install. Linux users are masochists that way.
You distroist! (Score:2)
Re:Linux version won't please (Score:3, Insightful)
Actually, Google is pretty damn popular. How can you not love a company that offers very good search for free and doesn't screw over customers while still being profitable?
Besides, it's also way too easy to install. Linux users are masochists that way.
RPMs and those Debian
Re:Linux version won't please (Score:2)
I think they will offer it for Linux (Score:2)
They know, that for their line of business, the geeks are a really powerful, _highly_ opinionated, bunch of people. Should we start disliking Google we will start telling our relatives to use some other search engine.
If they court us and we continue to like them, or maybe even like them more, then we will scoff at anyone who uses another search engine.
So, even if Linux has a small market share that market share is a highly inf
Re:Linux (Score:3, Interesting)
Linux Version (Score:2, Insightful)
Besides it would make sense to do both the only real difference is the UI programming at least for OS X, the filesystems on both systems are very similar.
Re:Linux Version (Score:4, Interesting)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Linux Version (Score:3, Interesting)
Maybe for a select group of users. Slashdot statistics could be similar. But for a website for the general public, that figure would be much too large.
Re:Linux Version (Score:2)
Re:Linux Version (Score:2)
Many linux users still do, although that number is rapidly diminishing as more OEMs start to offer OS-less or Linux PCs.
See, MSFT leans hard on OEMs to not offer OS-less machines, since they're "obviously going to install pirated Windows" (scare quotes intended; search for "Naked PC" articles from a few years back). Thus, it's MSFT or Another Very Minority OS Which Won't Give You Much Profit Due To Support Costs (as o
Re:Linux Version (Score:2)
Re:Linux Version (Score:2)
Re:Linux Version (Score:3, Informative)
Probably one of the more accurate accounts of installed base for various operating systems was Google itself on the old Google Zeigeist pages. Unfortionately Google didn't like people using their Zeitgeist pages to infer market share so they stopped doing it last July, but June 2004 shows Linux accounting for 1% of Google searches and MacOS 3%. Certainly Google still tracks this information internally and the fact that they are releasing a MacOS version of their desktop tool says a lot about how MacOS is
Re:Linux Version (Score:4, Insightful)
This is of course very different between Windows, Mac and Linux (and within Linux there are, as usual, several different methods)
Re:Linux Version (Score:4, Interesting)
What google knows is that most Linux desktop installs are downloaded gratis, installed gratis and that the owner/user likes/is interested in "gratis". I'd suggest that many of the machines are home-built not bought-built too?
OS X, OTOH costs money, and only really (Pear notwistanding/not useable) runs on hardware that has to be paid for (pre-built) at the same time as the OS.
Think about it;
User interested in free-stuff / cost savings
vs
User who paid the Apple premium.
Where would _you_ rather vector a global ad-network to???
User who
Re:Linux Version (Score:5, Informative)
Most importantly, this is not about API, this is about data. What this is all about is searching and indexing datafiles and from this point of view the files on a typical Mac OS X machine and a Linux desktop will be quite different.
For instance on Mac OS X, some data files are actually bundles, i.e a directory with a special bit telling the Finder to handle the folder as a single file. Keynotes files are bundles with extension .key that contain an XML manifest an the different files included in the presentation. Older Mac OS filetypes would store some meta-data (icons, keywords) in the resource forks. Those things have, as far as I know, no equivalent in the Linux world.
On the other hand, a Linux version would have to cope with the differences between distributions (what source code should be indexed on gentoo machine?) , the different desktop managers (they might store interesting information), and different file format (it would be nice if it could parse tgif files for instance).
In the end, it is all about data, not about licences, APIs or anything else. The whole point of meta-data and searching, for me, is not about indexing my music collection (I keep it organised), but to be able to search my old files, which include Quickdraw 1 Picts and Word 4.0 (DOS) files.
Re:Linux Version (Score:2)
Re:Linux Version (Score:2)
Re:Linux Version (Score:2)
The last estimates I've heard was 3% or so for both and even that's not all that reliable. Another thing to be concerned about are the nuances between the Linux distributions, which can reduce inter-distribution portabilty for commercial entities, wereas OS X is... pretty much OSX.
Isn't the usage rate of Firefox greater than this?
In regards to Google toolbar, I don't know how
Re:Linux Version (Score:5, Funny)
Maybe they know it didn't?
Re:Linux Version (Score:2)
*ducks and runs away before the Beowulf Cluster jokes come*
Re:Linux Version (Score:2)
Google is numero uno in search, and is most certainly the one ubiquitous website that everyone visits. If anyone would know the distribution of OSes, it would be these guys.
Maybe you do have a valid, albeit disappointing, point
Re:Linux Version (Score:3, Insightful)
I guess Google must not know that Linux has now outpaced desktop installs vs Mac's..
Apart from the fact that stat was falsified, they are VERY different users.
Most Linux users are capable of writing Google for themselves, or at least know how to grep search anything they want.
Mac users are probably the ones who would appreciate Google's finesse the most.
Linux is fun but cut the bullsh*t (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Linux Version (Score:3, Insightful)
They also probably realize that among the influencers in chattering classes (bloggers, journalists, etc), Macs enjoy a higher than average marketshare.
Re:Linux Version (Score:2, Interesting)
I can say, that I know many persons using GNU/Linux as their desktop OS, but I don't know anyone using Mac at home.
Also ~ 5-6 % of my homepage visitors are using Linux, only ~ 0.3-0.5 are using Mac's (MacPPC+MacOSX).
At least in Latvia (where I am living) Linux is more popular than MacOS. I'm too use GNU/Linux (Slackware) as OS for my workstation at home.
Re:Linux Version (Score:3, Insightful)
Macintosh numbers are not particularly high, granted. Interestingly
Re:Linux Version (Score:2)
Excellent... (Score:1, Funny)
mehh, i'm waiting for (Score:4, Funny)
Re:mehh, i'm waiting for (Score:2)
"Search" is already fundamental to Mac OS X (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:"Search" is already fundamental to Mac OS X (Score:5, Insightful)
Search is already a fundamental part of the Mac desktop experience...
Individual apps integrate search well, but as an overall system, search on the mac leaves a lot to be desired. Searches using the Finder SUCK: they take forver, and they don't ever seem to help you find what you're looking for.
Tiger (10.4) should improve this quite a bit with Spotlight, Apple's new index/search architecture, which includes a nice plugin system (recently described in more detail here [apple.com]). This theoretically will enable Spotlight to search everything the Google Desktop searches. If Apple can deliver reasonable indexing speeds and quality search results, they're going to be able to compete.
On the other hand, because Apple's already baked in support for Google via Safari, most Mac users are already trained to use Google as their Internet search tool of choice. A Google desktop would extend this behavior seamlessly, so I'll be really curious to see if Apple can retrain users to use Spotlight for local searches. My guess is if Google can deliver soon enough, Spotlight will be a second-try search tool on the Mac.
But wouldn't it be cool to see Apple and Google would combine their efforts?
Re:"Search" is already fundamental to Mac OS X (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm finding Google Desktop relatively useless because most of my docs are in OO.o format, or old Works documents (.wps), neither of which it indexes. It also doesn't index my PHP or ColdFusion code at all, which means I
You mac guys are funny (Score:1, Funny)
Most people "use" a computer.
Mac fanatics have a "user experience".
Re:"Search" is already fundamental to Mac OS X (Score:2)
Thanks!
Hard to believe (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Hard to believe (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Hard to believe (Score:2)
I was using my home-grown platform independent library for the file access, and was starting to worry a bit about how much overhead this would add to the index building - it was ta
Re:Hard to believe (Score:3, Insightful)
They'll probably try to reus
Re:Hard to believe (Score:2)
eclipse, oracle, word, mozilla, firefox.. if you expect a major piece of softwae not to require some sorta tie back into what you are doing, you are insane.
Re:Hard to believe (Score:2)
Regardless, they weren't building a platform abstraction toolkit. They were building a desktop search tool. Only a very bad developer would build one when he was trying to build the other.
Re:Hard to believe (Score:2)
I sort of doubt that Google Desktop is that tied to Windows. It no doubt has some ties - but I think the 'rebuilding from the ground up' thing is possibly a bit of spin.
Consider that Mac OS is getting Spotlight soon, and GD will have to compete with that. Now, one thing Mac users don't like (and this works the other way too, come to that) is shoddy ports of Windows products that 'just about' run on Mac OS, but don't really use the idioms of the platform. So if Mr Google says "We had to rebuild it from
Re:Hard to believe (Score:2)
nice, but could do better (Score:5, Interesting)
You cannot define which directories to index, and it only indexes single machine. (understandable since it's desktop search, not small network search)
The google search keeps index of the data on the desktop harddrive. If you have lots of files, the index size gets insanely large, some say nearly 2Gb when you have large amount of documents lying around.
It would be relatively easy to build something similar which would work over administrative shares using samba crawlers with defined administrative password for each machine, and you'd have control of which data it would collect. Maybe nfs crawlers too. Plenty of both freely available.
Tricky part is to create the meta indexing of the containing
But the more open developement would allow other indexing, such as ID3 tags.
And perhaps you could add your own meta data to indexed files by filetype, and enhance the search for example only images by containing meta description something like: "meta this image has: cat vase window apple". Search for apple and it returns that picture, crude but works atleast partially.
Problem with this kind of version is that you'd need separate server for the searching, you could reuse some old machine for this.(not problem for most of people here since everyone has extra box somewhere in intranet)
Make the search running with mysql+apache and it would be almost platform independent.
Re:nice, but could do better (Score:4, Informative)
You cannot define which directories to index, and it only indexes single machine.
Yes, you can. Look harder.The google search keeps index of the data on the desktop harddrive. If you have lots of files, the index size gets insanely large, some say nearly 2Gb when you have large amount of documents lying around.
That's why you should configure GD to only index your work folders. .... Some other interesting stuff
You can already sort of do this. See Harvest [sourceforge.net]Re:nice, but could do better (Score:2)
How do you do that? I have only seen the ability to exclude directories, and if I could just limit it to certain directories, that'd be incredibly sweet for the purposes I'd like to use it for.
Tough competition... (Score:5, Informative)
The linux/BSD version ... (Score:5, Funny)
Sunny Dubey
Re:The linux/BSD version ... (Score:2)
google "foobar"
Now THAT is a charm.
You linux guys always make it harder than it needs to be!
Spotlight? (Score:5, Informative)
I have the WWDC Tiger Beta and Spotlight is just flawless. It's totally integrated into the desktop instead of just being browser based, it supports way more file formats, it searches in real time as you type, it lets you save searches as virtual folders and what not...
Not to mention that Mac users are a fanatical bunch that usually upgrade when they have the chance, meaning that a year from now the majority will be using Tiger.
Re:Spotlight? (Score:1)
By just using a combination of the "control-tab" command to switch between apps and using the quicksilver shortcuts I never have to use the dock anymore or search for documents using the inferor 10.3 native search option.
The greater plan (Score:5, Insightful)
They may just be doing the ground work and getting an installed base for the next version Google Desktop which will connect you to froogle and let you search your desktop as well as your Google Mail in one fell swoop.
I'm just trying to think how they can integrate their Google Desktop with what they already have to make money.
Didn't they just buy a map company?
So you could have this one box where you do a search and if Google Desktop recognizes it as an address it'll bring up a map instead of searching your local computer. Much like it gives you the answer 4 when you type in 2 + 2 instead of searching the web.
So Google is in a position where they can give you one single search box which will let you search for anything you want and it will intelligently look in the right place.
Why not cross-platform ? (Score:4, Insightful)
Or, if Qt is an issue, why not Java ?
And we are talking Google, the Champions of the internet, and a serious competitor for MS on some areas ... cross platform should be the way to go for them !
Re:Why not cross-platform ? (Score:2, Insightful)
They don't need cross-platform toolkits. They hire cross-platform programmers, who are experienced in coding in native apis like Xlib and Windows API.
Or, if Qt is an issue, why not Java ?
Maybe because Java requires the end-user to install a Java Virtual Machine? Remember, we're dealing with the desktop market here. The less things the average user has to install to get things running, the better.
And don't tell me Java is already intalled everywhere, ok? It isn't.
Re:Why not cross-platform ? (Score:3, Interesting)
But Dante, this is exactly the point. Your development cost this way is roughly propotional to N when you develop for N platforms. If you use a cross platform toolkit, somebody did the effort of abstracting/mapping the native APIs on a common API for you. You develop once, desploy everywhere. Your cost is N times lower, in this case 3 times lower.
Re:Why not cross-platform ? (Score:2)
Re:Why not cross-platform ? (Score:2)
Re:Why not cross-platform ? (Score:2)
I'm not the most knowledgeable person around, but I'd say that excludes anything non-native, no? Maybe not, what do I know.
BTW, am I the only one who sometimes stands in his office, mumbling "search"? Now, that would be a power-tool...
BTW2, I don't think most ordinary users would prefer Google over Tiger's blitz und glitz...
Re:Why not cross-platform ? (Score:2)
The only part of the program that even has a GUI is the installer. Everything else is done through web browser integration. But I'm sure Qt and Java can integrate with IE, Firefox and Safari, right? Oh, and the application runs as a system tray application on Windows and probably a menulet on MacOS... Qt supports both of those, right? In a single project?
Before you go around giving advice to Google, maybe you should expend a little effort
quicksilver (Score:1, Informative)
How about earlier Windows? (Score:2)
Google, I wanted to try this out. I'll even make you a deal, I'll stop using the Google Drive thing if you put out the Desktop for Windows 98 machines.
Thank you.
Re:How about earlier Windows? (Score:2, Funny)
I'm using Windows ME
Don't look now, but I think your /, account has been hacked. This can't be a serious post. No self respecting registered slashdotter would use Windows ME -- it was terrible. Hell, I wouldn't even expect that of an Anonymous Coward.
Re:How about earlier Windows? (Score:2)
Re:How about earlier Windows? (Score:2)
But really, Google can do whatever they want. Apparently they don't consider it worthwhile to make a version for ME.
Is it just me... (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Is it just me... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Is it just me... (Score:3, Funny)
am I the only person in the world who knows just where I put everything on my computer?
No, not just you, there's also the people who sort their book library by Dewey decimals, have cataloged everything they've ever recorded onto videotape, and enter all the fields on iTunes tracks.
On second thoughts, yes, it is just you, you anal-retentive freak! :)
Re:Is it just me... (Score:2)
I also download the cover art, is that so wrong?
Re:Is it just me... (Score:2)
Network Shares (Score:2)
Which, in the case of google's multiple user problems it probably a blessing
Google Desktop vs Spotlight: you're not getting it (Score:5, Informative)
Spotlight is not an app, it is a collection of technologies which make it possible for 3rd party apps to support searching.
At the same time, the 1st party (Apple) will be demonstrating how it's done by building search into all the system's own apps, eg, searching for the control panel which changes the desktop pattern within the control panels area. Yes, I know I'm calling them control panels when they're actually system preferences because most posters sound like they haven't used Mac OS X.)
This doesn't mean 3rd parties shouldn't attempt to compete at searching, quite the reverse: Spotlight is FOR 3rd party developers who want to do searching..
So not only would Google Desktop not be in competition with Spotlight, it could actually use its hooks into the OS to create something very powerful indeed.
Dang! (Score:2)
Why? (Score:3, Insightful)
-Don.
"More useful every day" (Score:3, Informative)
Spotlight vs. Google Desktop (Score:3, Insightful)
Spotlight for Mac owns Google Desktop for Windows.
Google desktop is great on Windows, which has nothing. But on Mac... it can't compete with the type-ahead find. The only way it will come close is if they change their strategy and create a desktop app rather than a web app.
Google Desktop vs. Spotlight (Score:2, Informative)
The end goal of google desktop is attach advertisements to information gathered from data all over your machine. I haven't downloaded it, so I'm not entirely sure of its capabilities or whether is does that or not (I only have a mac here). However, considering that something like this is more like spyware with vastly intelligent (patented) algorithsm, oppose to Gators strstr() algorithm.
Spotlights end goal is to help you find your files without using that crap Finder. Apple doesn't want you to use Safa
Update and clarification (Score:2)
Cory Doctrow says this is being mis-reported (Score:2)
Re:Mac version (Score:3, Interesting)
Maybe he uses a Mac?
Everything Google has done so far has been pure gold, so it's hard not to believe they've their acquired their taste from having at least a passing familiarity with the best designed OS GUI around.