I think this is promising too much and I doubt it can deliver. It has a greater chance of wasting CPU/HDD/RAM than to actually deliver useful information.. It is like a super-hyped version of the indexing service really, except now your computer stores information without you knowing. I want to see where they draw the line between redundant information and useful information. It also has vast security concerns because it can store duplicate copies of part or all of documentation that you may have deleted. I find it curious that all the content on WinFS I have seen talks a lot about how it works and what it stores but I am yet to see actual uses for the information. I mean integrating an E-Mail search with the shell is no big deal but then how do you go from that to integrating it with the file system? The same is true about pictures and word documents. You could easily justify the need for a more advanced search built into the shell that supports all of this but a new file system is wasteful and useless.Longhorn has some things I would like to try but this is not one of them.
Manip wrote:Longhorn has some things I would like to try but this is not one of them.
I suppose I may have overemphasized mail (including news, RSS posts, fax and IM message) in this post. One reason is that I've seen previous discussions around WinFS that are very photo centric or mp3 centric. I talk about the messaging centric viewpoint because I'm using that as a proxy for talking about information relating to People in general. It's the People scenarios that I think really make WinFS a compelling world for users (not just ISV's). Frankie's right about this being a long standing wave of computer adoption driven by collaboration. Lotus Notes was a great waypoint in that arc, along with Usenet, BBS's, Bix/Compuserv, ITS NOTES, message boards, RSS and all the various incarnations of mail from uucp to modern SMTP/MIME. People love to connect with each other.
samdruk wrote:People love to connect with each other.