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Locate32

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daddydave:
btw I'm curious. I used Locate32 for quite awhile. But I noticed on Vista it used folder change notification on the entire drive it seemed. I noticed periods where my drive was all but unusable as Explorer went through every file on all my disks checking if they changed or something. It really made it unusable for me. Did you notice anything like that? Perhaps it's been fixed?

Just wondering as that alone drove me to use Everything Search.

-MilesAhead (May 03, 2012, 03:48 PM)
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I've never noticed that. I have mine set to index at something like 3 AM, or manually using F8 (or is it F9?). On the manual index, I have noticed it being slower sometimes than other times, so maybe that is. What is folder change notification exactly?

MilesAhead:
There's an OS API where you can register your app or window to get folder change notification messages or updates. I forget if it uses a Windows Message or what. Last time I used Locate32 I noticed when I set it to automatically detect changes, I got that Explorer opening every file in the system. I assume it used that API. If I turned the automatic change detection off, it didn't churn the drive but then I had to do manual updates, sort of like the Linux locate command.

Everything Search isn't perfect.  Sometimes I notice on start it doesn't refresh the little database and I have to kill it, delete the .db file, then run it again. Now and then it happens. Other than that it's pretty easy on the drive. It keeps the .db in memory. I notice when I kill the app it writes the file to the home folder.

Of course on Vista pre-SP1 there was a lot of stuff that contributed to HD churning. SP1 fixed most of it. Even so, I turn Windows Search indexer off for Windows Seven.

daddydave:
There's an OS API where you can register your app or window to get folder change notification messages or updates. I forget if it uses a Windows Message or what. Last time I used Locate32 I noticed when I set it to automatically detect changes, I got that Explorer opening every file in the system. I assume it used that API. If I turned the automatic change detection off, it didn't churn the drive but then I had to do manual updates, sort of like the Linux locate command.-MilesAhead (May 03, 2012, 04:57 PM)
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I don't think I have every used automatic change detection, because I have always associated the program with the Linux locate command and manual updates. I just run an automatic update overnight, since most of the time I am looking for a file older than 24 hours. Manual updates do take a while though, when I need one.

I love the interception of Win-F, it makes me think this is a natural evolution of Find UI from Windows 95, if Microsoft had not let Find/Search go to rot.

Nzyme:
Shortcut in Startup folder.
-PhilB66 (May 02, 2012, 10:26 PM)
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Do I place only the .exe file in the startup folder or the entire Locate32 folder?

tomos:
Shortcut in Startup folder.
-PhilB66 (May 02, 2012, 10:26 PM)
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Do I place only the .exe file in the startup folder or the entire Locate32 folder?
-Nzyme (May 13, 2012, 11:54 PM)
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Alt+drag the exe to the startup folder (that creates a shortcut)
or right-click the exe & "create shortcut" - that's usually made on the desktop. You can them move it.

There are lots of (free) apps for checking/managing apps that start with windows.

I used use Codestuff Starter, but havent installed it yet on this machine (I notice the website doesnt mention windows 7. There is a portable version there though so easy to try out.)

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