Google Desktop Now on Linux 293
mytrip writes "Google was set to launch late on Wednesday a beta version of Google Desktop search for Linux in a sign of encouragement by the search giant for Linux on the desktop.
Google Desktop allows people to search the Web while also searching the full text of all the information on their computer, including Gmail and their Web search history. Because the index is stored locally on the computer, users can access Gmail and Web history while offline."
Privacy (Score:5, Insightful)
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Anyway, all my pr0n is stored on M$'s filestore from now on.
Re:Privacy (Score:4, Interesting)
They have actually a somewhat poor track record of security in their desktop offerings (desktop and web accelerator).
My built-in level of paranoia says, the problem's more to do with this app being a generic attack vector for anyone willing to abuse your computer.
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Yeah but even then, that's when the beauty of Linux kicks in. If someone discovers, for example, a buffer overflow in the app, they're still facing an unknown kernel version, distro filesystem, and GCC version on top of Linux's user privileges. It's much harder to create an exploit that could be used to take over your account, let alone take control of the system. There's really no wide reaching baseline from which to build
What make Linux secure is... (Score:4, Funny)
So you're saying Linux is secure because it's hard to develop for?
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Re:Privacy (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Privacy (Score:5, Insightful)
No, it's more like security by diversity. If a burglar had to try dozens of entirely different types of keys (never mind all the key patterns that each type includes) to break into a house, he would not find breaking into houses as attractive a prospect, and if he did try, it would be more likely that someone would notice him. Similarly, if a hacker has to try dozens of different buffer overflow attacks against your system, he's less likely to target it, and if he does, you're more likely to notice it, since naturally a buffer overflow attack will degrade into a crashed program if it doesn't actually execute the intended payload.
Besides, there's nothing wrong with security by obscurity, as long as it's only one tool. For example, moving your ssh port to 2222 instead of 22 will probably subject you to an order of magnitude or two fewer ssh worms, which is a good thing. But of course you'd still want to have good passwords. Obscurity is a useful tool, especially when you are protecting a system that has no intrinsic reason to be selected. It can make you less of a target, and since security is never perfect, any layer that reduces the probability of an attack is useful.
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ps- let me get the next response out of the way: In Communist China your desktop searches you.
Re:Privacy (Score:4, Insightful)
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Re:Privacy (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Privacy (Score:4, Informative)
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void *fn = dlsym(NULL, ReverseString("tekcos"));
But more generally, it's very common for programs to use utility libraries that make network calls on their behalf. Simply shelling out to wget would bypass your absurdly simple check and doesn't have to be malicious. How much software is written these days that invokes BSD sockets directly? I wouldn't do it if I had a better library to wrap it, and usually I do.
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That would be insecurity through obscurity.
Re:Privacy (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Privacy (Score:4, Insightful)
* No, I don't thrawl through every line of code of every FOSS program I use.
* Those programs that I _do_ go through, I can most certainly miss something or not understand something.
But it's still more likely that I'll find a secret backdoor in an open-source program than in a closed-source one. And the real beauty isn't that _I_ have to find something, but that others, like me, can find something. Nothing much can beat the collective scrutiny of a million nerds.
Re:Privacy - But is it open source? (Score:2)
The bigger issue for me is if it includes the source so I can check it doesn't "phone home". Plus it would be easy to extend of course.
So, Google, any chance of releasing the source code? GPL even?
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IIRC, you are asked when it's first configured. If you are really paranoid, just tell your firewall to block it. You do run a firewall, don't you?
Seriously though, I replaced Google Desktop with Copernic because the latter also allows you to search network drives.
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Here's the link. (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Here's the link. (Score:5, Funny)
Disclaimer: yea, I totally mean what I said.
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Beagle (Score:5, Informative)
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Re:Beagle (Score:5, Informative)
This means that just as the existing programs are starting to come to terms, Google comes and returns the chaos on the desktop search scene. While I like Google internet search, their desktop offering has me feeling eerie. I would prefer using Mono over Googles closed source program. But even better is the ultra-efficient Strigi [sf.net] which will be part of KDE4 and indexes streams instead of files.
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A lot of open source advocates are pretty put off by closed source hardware drivers but a hard disk search utility, eww. I think this is going be be about as popular as another SCO Linux distribution would be.
I wonder how long it will take for an open source version to develop, that not only looks better, and does a better job, and is guaranteed free from advertising for life but also when it does
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I think I'll wait (Score:5, Funny)
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That sounded too 'marketing', I feel sick.
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slocate? (Score:2)
Re:slocate? (Score:5, Informative)
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Yes, it is open source.
Distributed Desktop Search (Score:4, Interesting)
it does (Score:5, Informative)
How does it run? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:How does it run? (Score:4, Informative)
The article says it was "developed natively." So this is definitely not the win.exe version wrapped in Wine?
Nope. Runs for real, native stuff as far as I can tell. And, I might add, it runs in more than gnome and KDE as claimed - it parked in fluxbox right in the tray like a good boy. The RPM even converted to a Slack package just fine.
It hasn't indexed yet even though I've told it to, but I think it's waiting for idle time on my machine and I'm killing it this morning.
No 64 bit (Score:5, Insightful)
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But fret not, you can join them by simply cutting your processor in half.
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Before Hammer (the original x86-64 architecture) was even released, AMD announced that they were seeing something like 5-15% improvement just by compiling for 64 bit. You get 64 bit data types and operations on them in a single cycle, not multiples, for example, and there are other benefits.
This delay has been good (Score:2, Insightful)
Thank you Google for delaying the Linux version! We now have Beagle, Strigi, the Nepomuk project and more as free alternatives to your proprietary software. There would have been free desktop search software anyway, but most likely there would have been a bit less enthusiasm for its development, and some distributions might have flocked to supporting the Google product.
I'm excited that Linux is still flying under the radar to such a large extent, when it comes to commercial software. Soon it will be Ready
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I am now testing GDLinux and it feels much more sane and does not contain wine nor mono which I am quite happy with.
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Beagle has. http://linux.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=06/01/18/ 195220 [slashdot.org]
Did you actually go and search for it? Thirty seconds ago, this http://slashdot.org/search.pl?query=beagle [slashdot.org] gave me the above article as the fourth result. It daes from Jan 2006 and I remember it making the frontpage (or at least my RSS feed).
light and works on light windowmanagers (Score:2)
Linux (Score:2, Funny)
"Because the index is stored locally on the computer, users can access Gmail and Web history while offline."
Which is a good thing because despite Linux being 60 some years old now I still can't get this damn wireless card to work despite battling with drivers and make install for days.Re: (Score:2)
Just how old do you think Torvalds is?
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Web browser interface sucks (Score:3, Insightful)
You can't work with the results when they come up in your browser window.
This is one thing that Spotlight really does have going for it. Being able to have a search folder which dynamically has all the results I want whenever I open it is really useful. Now spotlight needs some work and is not perfect, but google desktop is really lacking in this area.
Obsession with search (Score:5, Insightful)
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I too put files where I can find them, and on the occasion I need to find something I use grep. I guess we're the exception?
Tom
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But judgemental issues aside, i think it would be quite useful to have a desktop search application that actually collects the documents that lie around all over the drive and puts them in neat directory structures with a topical organisation... Hmm.. where's that tracker source!
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I installed Google Desktop on my Windows machine not too long ago... And uninstalled it shortly thereafter. I just didn't use it. Sure, it was nice to be notified when I got a new message through GM
Finally, and Amen! (Score:3, Interesting)
I have Doc folders and photo/music folders and temp folders for projects and I've got e-mail back to 1999 (and routinely go back and look for old e-mails) but have never needed more than just Thunderbird's search capabilities (and rarely use that).
I'm seriously interested in WHY people need a tool like
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I definitely do this at work, on my Windows machine. However, at home on my Linux machine I have years of old stuff. Usually I put it in a directory called "old" in my home directory. But even then
Re:Obsession with search (Score:4, Informative)
You know, I used to feel this exact same way. Even after I upgraded to Tiger I hardly ever touched the Spotlight menu, and only really used it in Mail.app where I did occasionally need a bit of help digging for some random nugget in the last couple of years worth of email archives.
Then one day about a year ago, I decided to give it a try. I think it was because I was working on a very large number of projects at the time and each project was complicated enough that they had their own nested folder structures, and while I could find everything, having to drill down into the folders was getting a bit tedious. I also have a decent number of applications installed, not a ton mind you, but a pretty decent amount, and digging through the apps folder for the utility I don't use often enough to pollute my dock with was also getting tedious.
So I tried Spotlight to see if it might make things better. I really expected to think it was stupid and go back to the status quo. What I found was that in many cases, while Spotlight was not perfect, and occasionally it was actually slower depending on what the computer was thinking about at the time, it was definitely more convenient. I use it all the time now. I still save all my documents in an intelligent folder structure with descriptive names (both for folders and for filenames), however when I need to find a manual or spec sheet for something, I type the name into Spotlight and look at the PDF results. Need to launch Cyberduck (the FTP client I use), type it in Spotlight and hit the key command to launch the first item (Applications appear at the top of the list).
Of course these desktop search programs are not for everyone. It may not work for you. However, don't knock it till you have really tried it. I don't mean try it for one search this afternoon then just dismiss it. Give it a week or two and really use it during that time. Maybe it won't work for you, but that doesn't automatically mean that the people it does work for are doing something wrong, they just use available tools in a different way.
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find ~/documents/2007-0[456]* -print0 | xargs -0 grep -Li "minimize risk"
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Woo hoo! (Score:2, Insightful)
security? (Score:3, Insightful)
But why their own repositories? (Score:2)
(A) directly download the
(B) Add Google's signing key and repositories to my system, and then use APT to retrieve and install the package.
Does anyone know why Google didn't just add this to the standard Debian repositories? Maybe because the software isn't considered ready for prime-time yet? I don't see the average new Ubuntu user feeling comfortable with the installation techniques Google currently supports.
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a) People don't just "add stuff to the Debian repositories". Debian Package Maintainers do, after a looong boring process.
b) Even if they did, having stuff in the Debian repositories doesn't make it available for Ubuntu users, which have their one separate reps.
Still this will probably make it to debian non-free and ubuntu multiverse at some not-too-distant point.
Who cares.. (Score:3, Informative)
If GTalk was released for Ubuntu it would be the killer app to have since everyone is restricted to using Skype. I would even pay for a fully working GTalk on Linux.
Too much space (Score:2, Insightful)
GoogleOS? (Score:3, Insightful)
Google Desktop menu item (Score:3, Interesting)
sudo apt-get remove google-desktop-linux
Re:Spousal Abuse (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Spousal Abuse (Score:4, Insightful)
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yet Google would still not allow them to try their products until everyone else had.
No, that's not a correct analogy, as Google does not have to produce and sell any product just because *you* say so. A better analogy would someone getting pissed because they can't get a Ferarri engine put in their VW bug.
No, it would be like a company where everyone drives a VW and uses a VW in their daily work and would be less productive if they had to switch to a different vehicle, but the company releases Ferrari accessories first and foremost and only releases VW versions long after the Ferrari versions.
And the analogies get stupider and stupider, but the point is, while no one can demand Google do anything, it's really weird that they use almost exclusively Linux computers in their work, yet Linux gets second (or
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Now we have an excellent analogy which explains exactly what's happening at the moment we can easily see that since the universe is so massive and no one cares whether or not black holes or red
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Speaking of analogies, why the hell is this thread called "Spousal Abuse"? When did Google marry Linux, and why wasn't I invited to the wedding?
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Desktop searches are designed for the non-techies. Non-techies typically use Windows. 'Nuff said. Look, I know everyone here has hard-ons for Linux here, but please use some common sense.
There's plenty of people who use Linux on the desktop, and I'm not saying they have to release Linux programs at the same time as Windows or Mac, I'm just saying it's weird that they use Linux but don't put a priority on making software for it.
That said, I'm actually just happy they've release what they have. We have Google Earth, Picasa, and now Google Desktop. We've dealt with worse from other companies.
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We have Google Earth, Picasa
No, we have an old, stale version of Picasa with only token support now. Picasa for Linux is ass and the Blog this feature for example is now broken because they updated blogger and haven't bothered yet to catch up the Linux version.
There's a developer in the group that says they are working on it, but it's been like this for quite some time - so it shows that Google's linux support is only token support at best. If they had Linux support they'd use a cross playform development process rather than porti
Re:Spousal Abuse (Score:4, Insightful)
You assume they built Google Desktop to run it on their own clustered computers? Or is this one blatantly fallacious argument you pulled off there.
How about counting the OS numbers on the machines they're targeting.
gtalk and all the rest (Score:2)
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IIRC all of the protocols relay through the Jabber network anyhow.
It is pretty trivial to set up, and unless you walk to specifically use a crappy closed source app, I am not sure what your concerns are. Did I miss the point?
Re:Spousal Abuse (Score:5, Informative)
Google Desktop has been available for Mac OS X since April.
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Re:QT, GTK or Mono? (Score:5, Funny)
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http://earth.google.com/download-earth.html [google.com]
It runs faster on my Linux box than on my Apple computer. A recent Google presentation claimed they'd be doing more and more things on Linux and I suspect this is just the tip of the iceberg.
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As soon as slocate achieves over 90% penetration, and qualifies as a monopoly as Microsoft does.
I wonder how likely that is.
Uhh (Score:2)
Basically never, you troll.
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But don't worry! You can install
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Yummy.