Posted By: Dan Fernandez | Nov 4th, 2008 @ 7:50 AM | 57,111 Views | 11 Comments
In Part 1, you saw the user experience of finding and organizing your files in Windows 7.

In Part 2, David Washington and Brandon Paddock show how developers can build federated search applications that enable you to easily search your organization's intranet or the Web and integrate those search results directly into Windows Explorer.

The best part is that instead of needing to install software on Windows 7 to get new search providers, you simply run an XML configuration file to add a search provider to your machine!

- Watch their PDC session here too
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littleguru
littleguru
<3 Seattle
Hi Brandon! Great overview. I like the split screen view. Smiley

What does specify whether or not I can filter the results by a returned tag? Like for example get the results and then filter in a way that only yellow bikes are shown in the explorer view.
For those of you wondering if the ailing economy has taken its toll on Microsoft employees, you can now see that I apparently can't even afford a decent hair cut Tongue Out


  • What does specify whether or not I can filter the results by a returned tag?

In-memory filtering works for any property, but since in-memory filtering may often operate over a subset of the results on the server, the usefulness may be limited over large result sets.

littleguru
littleguru
<3 Seattle
Yeah. But it makes sense to filter results or even sort them after they have been returned by the server...

@haircut: at least you don't eat anything in the video... hehe
PaoloM
PaoloM
Hypermediocrity
I wonder who's that gifted individual that painstakingly handcrafted that Channel 9 search connector... Smiley
I was hoping to hear more about searching multiple sources at the same time, and merging of those results. Does this functionality exist? If not, is it planned?
Dovella
Dovella
Go Microsoft !!!!!!!
Congratulation TEAM!!!!!!!

We're looking for a response in RIP the extended version. We've got all the source files for you to remix times square.

regards,

hr degree AND International business degree

Despite its name this is not actually a square, but rather two triangles, the upper one inverted so that they meet point to point. This odd shape is formed by errant Broadway, which here crosses Seventh Avenue at a diagonal. In fact, the northern triangle is more properly called Duffy Square, but everyone appears to refer to the whole of this space as Times Square.

bachelor degree business AND Computer Science degree AND Arts degree

Great work done by David Washington and Brandon Paddock; as they explained how to build federated search application in very useful way, this is basically what new coders need to follow. I am just a newbie in coding and working for a top rated web hosting company, and found this video very much interesting.

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