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I don't really know. That is why I put the question out to the forum. From the answers I have been seeing it appears that outside of researchers, students, and the like there would be little call for my application.
Had there been more positive feedback, I would have considered upgrading the application to a multi-user, department level application using something like WCF as the communication medium.
Steve Naidamast
Sr. Software Engineer
Black Falcon Software, Inc.
blackfalconsoftware@outlook.com
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I wouldn't be too hard on yourself. Your informal survey has a biased population (from a science of surveys point of view).
I do keep my personal documents managed manually. I also work on an enterprise level document manager (called Doc Man), which is just a small piece of the overall program. From what I've seen, I'm the exception for how well organized my documents are. I find Windows Search frustratingly stupid. I use grepWin (freeware) to deal with that, which only searches plaintext documents. If I had a binary searcher, or one that could search PDF's, Open Office files, and Microsoft Office files, then I would be set.
If I had to manually tag items, then I wouldn't bother with it. That's an extra layer of work that wouldn't be worth the effort.
Hope that helps.
Bond
Keep all things as simple as possible, but no simpler. -said someone, somewhere
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I'd want it web based so documents can be shared between the four computers I have in my home office, not to mention with others. And seeing as they are all laptops, having this web-based so I can be adding / updating documents from anywhere...well, you get the idea.
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Yes, definitely interested. This field is of great interest to me.
You're not planning to open source it though, from what you say?
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I'd be interested if it had integrated scanner support.
The difficult we do right away...
...the impossible takes slightly longer.
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If you provide access to the user documentation for the system, you might see some interest in it.
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Doubtful. Post your project on github or as an article here on Code Project. You can then get download stats to find out if there is any interest. If so then launch a commercial version.
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Yes, I think there could be a use for such an application. I am a big user of One Note, and I love it, but I realize I'm vulnerable to the One Note database getting corrupted and me losing everything. If, instead of One Note, I kept my information in various file formats such as Word, PowerPoint, and Excel, then a document management application that allowed me to access those files as easily as if they were together like in One Note would be great. I would perhaps have to keep files in a particular folder in order for them to be scanned together, but it would have the advantage of being independent, standard formats (even text files and PDFs) and I wouldn't be so dependent on a single application. Do you have any screen shots available?
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What does your document management system do?
Store docs? Windows does that.
What else?
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I already use a document management application by the name of Mendeley (that also syncs across devices) and it's free.
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Long ago, I used AltaVista desktop search which did this - it was great. Unfortunately, it disappeared along with the rest of AltaVista.
I currently use everything (from voidtools - great app) - if your application could filter by file name, file type, and content, I could see myself using it.
"Qulatiy is Job #1"
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The application does not use filtering in the sense you are thinking about. Instead, it uses categorical levels, which you would define. For example, you could set up a master-level of C#; then secondary levels for PDF, TXT, and Doc, DocX files. Or C#, then WPF, then PDF, TXT, Doc and DocX. This would be 3 levels of categories.
The application allows up to 5 currently...
The base version is completely free.
Steve Naidamast
Sr. Software Engineer
Black Falcon Software, Inc.
blackfalconsoftware@outlook.com
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For everyone who kindly provided me with some input regarding my desktop document management application, I have put up the Help File (CHM) in my online, download file storage server.
You may download the file from the following link... CDOCS 1.0.1
I had stopped working on the project some time ago, when I had nearly completed it. In fact, I believe that the development had been completed but with additional testing required.
The Help File should be relatively complete, which has both images and text describing all ofthe functionality of this application...
Steve Naidamast
Sr. Software Engineer
Black Falcon Software, Inc.
blackfalconsoftware@outlook.com
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Hi Steve,
I'm interested. Please add me to your email list for beta or for personal version - Grant@CGrantAnderson.com.
Thanks!
- Grant
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I think most expert users don't need this, but I have come across any number of small businesses that would be happy to use such a tool at that price. You should do just fine if you can get some early adopters and get good reviews out of them.
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everybody needs a good document (file) management system, depending on personal preference.
also, everybody will stubbornly try to manage it's own documents. at least i will.
best chance of selling software like that is with a medium to large sized companies, where document management has to be uniform.
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Thank you for your encouraging notes.
However, my current document management application is for personal use on the desktop. If it is popular enough, I was planning on developing a departmental level application.
While the base-version of my current application is free, a departmental level application would have some form of moderate cost for it (ie: $79.00 USD).
Steve Naidamast
Sr. Software Engineer
Black Falcon Software, Inc.
blackfalconsoftware@outlook.com
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published under CPOPL (CodeProject Open Poetic License) © copyright, 2021, assigned to CodeProject
A total dissolving of all sensation; a fade-to-a-black that swallowed all light, all sound ... my body melting away; skin, flesh, bones, blood, becoming a slurry, a whirlpool of jet-nothingness spiraling as it swirled down an invisible center.
Then ... I am in a cave on a mountainside; fierce winds make the cave howl as they pass over crevices; the howls echo in the depths of the cave. In rare moments, when the howls die down, I imagine I hear sounds of waves breaking on distant rocks.
The walls of the cave are covered in ochre handprints ... big meaty hands mixed with smaller, more delicate ones, mixed with tiny hands.
I become aware that I sit in front of a large device that reminds me of the mainframe computer in some movie I can't remember.
I mutter to myself: "no movies here," and, start laughing. My laughter is amplified as it echoes in the cave, overpowers the howling, becomes so loud the walls of the cave begin to shake.
The front of the device is now ablaze with swarms of pinpoints of light in different colors; I stare at them, entranced.
As my tsunami of sound fades, a deeper, more guttural, laughter replaces it.
There is a big hand on my shoulder: I turn around, surprised at my lack of surprise, of fear, at my sense that everything here is ... ordinary.
I turn, and look at the man connected to the hand; he is swarthy, hairy, beetle-browed, a powerful jaw in which very large teeth are exposed by his smile.
"Hello," I say, as if I just saw an old friend in line at Starbucks.
"Hello," he says, continuing his toothsome smile.
My voice ... before I can tell it what to say ... says:
"Can you tell me where ... what ... this is ?"
He replies:
"You're on the island you call Gibraltar, 42,000 years in your past ... at just the time your kind, and climate, killed the last of us."
"Are you going to kill me ?" I blurted out, surprised how matter of fact my tone was. Then, I noticed the club dangling from a strap around his waist ... a wicked looking scalloped-edged blade hafted into its end.
He laughed: "this (pointing at the blade) ... is the ultimate Mousterian blade; took us a few millennia to get that right ... that flint came from Spain ... it's worth at least three wives.
No, no point in killing you: there's enough of who we are in all those babies your kind, and mine, made ... to ensure our survival.
... And, you have a job to do."
"What job ?" I asked ... aware, now, that the shadow of some kind of scene-change was creeping up on me, of a stage backdrop being slowly lowered, of blacked-out stage hands sneaking on to the half-lit set to change the props.
The device ... no lights now ... I remembered what it was !
I was here to sample the signal density of the environment, and the device was a quantum scanner that analyzed every frequency.
I put my hands on the front of the device; they knew what to do.
As the swarm of lights became pulsing mandalas, then runes from forgotten magical grimoires, then cuneiform slashes, then pictographs, then icons, then words from every modern language, then alternating angry, sad, happy, emoticons ...
I dissolved, again.
The alarm clock was chiming, and beginning to play my morning concert of baroque music. The little apartment was shaking slightly as the trucks rumbled past.
My wrist-watch showed I had slept fitfully, with a few bursts of rapid heartbeat co-incident with REM sleep cycles.
The half-deaf neighbor had, as usual, turned up the morning news again so loud I could hear it.
Through the walls I heard vague, distorted, morsels of the usual CNN apocalyptic litany of ... climate change, pollution, wildfires, floods ...
I sorted through the usual robo-calls, checked the spam folder for accidental mis-fires.
The words "signal density" came to my mind, accompanied by an image of a scalloped Mousterian blade rotating in space ... a spotlight highlighting the precision geometry of its edges.
"nothing Mousterian 'round here," I mumbled to myself, as I headed to the kitchen to check the IOT connected coffee-maker.
[
descriptions of Neanderthal culture are extrapolated from current academic research, as well as transformed by imagination. debate on the presence, and extent, of Neanderthal trading networks, is an active topic based on new archaeological evidence, with hypotheses about homo sapiens vs. Neanderthal participation.
I know of no evidence for any trade goods on the sites in Gibraltar where it is possible the last of the Neanderthals survived.
]
«The mind is not a vessel to be filled but a fire to be kindled» Plutarch
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Hi Ron, Thanks for that compliment !
«The mind is not a vessel to be filled but a fire to be kindled» Plutarch
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Couldn’t sleep???
If you can't laugh at yourself - ask me and I will do it for you.
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Another story inspired by true event happen to me just a few mere hours ago...
Having a nap, I dream I was next Sunday playing the tabletop RPG campaign we are doing, with some of the same question I must prepared popping into my mind... Then I woke up and was confused whether it was Sunday already or not for a little while...
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Wonderful Bill.
"Rock journalism is people who can't write interviewing people who can't talk for people who can't read." Frank Zappa 1980
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