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On 30 aug 2007, at 12.34, Goddard, Duncan wrote: > >>The first time I got on a mac, I couldn't even figure out how to > find a file or the hard-drive. > >> I'm wasting time just FINDING things... > > many mac users complain that the one thing ruining an otherwise > reasonably pleasant user-experience, & the one achilles' heel of > the mac os, is & has been for many years, the finder. > there's even a forum called FTFF, fix the f finder. > > when I stumbled on this, it was because I was sure there must be a > utility for mac os that lets you search for files by the same > criteria as the search tool in windows. in particular, I was > getting fed up of losing disc space to things like AVI captures > made in error while using final-cut or even i-movie. these apps > specialise in hiding big chunks of media in "project files", making > it diffcult to clean out the hard drive without destroying metadata. > > I bought a copy of pathfinder & now the mac behaves like a windows > machine. :-) I mean I can search for stuff by size, by date, by > when it was modified..... so in addition to having parallels & w2k > on it, I now have a search-utility that can find files in both OSs. > > well, it works for me. > > d. I'm working with both systems daily and fully understand you point. But recently I have found that with OS X Mac has gotten a search function that works almost exactly as in Windows. It's called "Spotlight". I still thing though, that the File Explorer of Window's is a bit better than the way Finder displays hard drive content. In OS X there is no way of displaying the whole "tree" of a search path and keep it while checking some other folder. I'm thinking that it would be easy for Apple to fix this and if they did I would value Finder as the better one in this regard. Greetings from Sweden Per Boysen www.boysen.se (Swedish) www.looproom.com (international)