java-princess-old
Java-Princess
java-princess-old

Yes, and it's always up to date; any subsequent documents you create show up in your saved search. Your saved search behaves like a folder containing all your specified documents.

Relationship-wrecker. See my comment above about Everything and Locator. Basically, if it's faster than Windows search it's using the NTFS index instead of creating its own. NTFS doesn't discriminate between users, everything is just a file. You can run apps (including Messenger/gmail) as another user using these

See my comment about Everything above (below) Any 'fast' search program dispenses with indexing by using the NTFS changelog index which doesn't discriminate between user accounts. You can even run programs in an account as that user, as in email set to auto-login... (pause for thought)

Hey Whitson, your question about the function of the "Always search file names and contents" option... This gives you mixed results because it depends on the status of the "Index Properties and File Contents" setting for that particular file type. If you want it to search contents as well then you must set the option

If you create a saved search, for example .docx which displays all Word documents on your machine then this acts like a folder. You can select your saved search and then type a further refinement in the search box to narrow things down even more.

I think you replied to the wrong person.

While Everything is fast you men-about-town should also be aware that if you are on a multiuser computer Everything (and other similar programs) will display results from all user accounts. Let me cut to the heart. If your wife uses the computer and searches using Everything it will display the contents of your emails

You can be selective about searching from the Start Menu too. Just add a selector first such as Title: Don't forget the colon and don't leave a space after the colon before your search term.

Don't forget you can save commonly used searches. After the search has completed you have two choices. click the Save Search button in the toolbar to save the search to your User/Searches folder or you can click in the Explorer address bar after the search is complete and copy the resulting address. Paste this into

Just as a side note to IE users. If you find your History is inexplicably not being saved, before trying out any of the fixes, official and unofficial, which you might see, first try reindexing.

The Start Menu is the best place to search from and it may be helpful to know the decisions Windows makes on which items are displayed.

You can't educate pork.

Yeah but they're only charging just over 5 dollars per handset not $20.

"unsubstantiated rumor"

You can assume that but I can't drive which is a bit of a blow to your theory :)

I might hold you to the contribution thing. I'm a C++ girl, not a web programmer and the com based IE extension model, while it has served IE well is a major deterrent to producing add-ons. I tend to the view IE is the better for it because to be quite honest the quality of extensions for Chrome and Firefox is

It might be worth mentioning that the user should scan the TPLs by converting them to .txt files and doing a search and replace on +d to -d.

IE9 gives you the choice.

I'll take that as a compliment but did you reply to the correct post? This thread isn't about IE and I never mentioned it.

Ok, I concede. I was going to say this in your other post but it'll do here. I opened one, yes exactly one extension - I don't know if it was a Chrome or FF species, with the idea of converting it to run on IE (I've developed a way to install js-based extensions in IE if they don't use jQuery). The extension was a