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Date: 04 January 2012 | ||
| Size: 7.99 MB | |||
| Price: 14 day free trial, $39.95 | |||
| WhereIsIt? HomePage | |||
| Download WhereIsIt? | |||
| Note: WhereIsIt? provides access to the contents of any media you have from a cataloged database... | |||
| Editor's Rating: 4/5 |
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WhereIsIt? 2012 is an application written for 32-bit Windows operating systems, designed to help you maintain and organize a catalog of your computer media collection, including CD-ROMs, audio CDs, diskettes, removable drives, hard drives, network drives, DVDs, or any other media that Windows can access as a drive. The most basic goal for WhereIsIt is to provide access to the contents of any media you have from a cataloged database, even if the media itself is not available on the system - you can browse lists of files and folders, search by any criteria, use descriptions, thumbnails, categories, flags, etc.
WhereIsIt can be used to handle any kind of data, including downloaded programs, magazine CD-ROMs, music collections like MP3s or audio CDs, graphics collections, document backups, etc. WhereIsIt can handle lots of them, too, a couple hundreds or thousands disks in a catalog is nothing unusual, yet catalogs remain reasonably small, single-filed and easy to transfer or send to other users. You can also create more than one catalog, and at any time open and work with as many catalogs at once as needed.
WhereIsIt 2011 is easy to use for both beginners and advanced users. It features a familiar and well thought-out, Explorer-like user interface, combined with strong searching and reporting capabilities, multi-language support, automated description and thumbnails importing through extendable plugins from more than 70 different sources, and much more.
Changelog:
(WhereIsIt? version 2012 build 104)
- Added (preliminary) support for operating with catalog files (.ctf) larger than 2GB. Your file system must be able to handle files of that size, and any single disk image in catalog must still be under 2GB in data size once saved. Note that getting catalog files anywhere near 2GB in size requires some reflection on your actions and intentions, as you are likely heavly abusing thumbnails, or otherwise getting way too much data in a single catalog file. Organizing cataloged data and breaking it down into more catalogs would be strongly recommended.
- Improved performance when moving around large chunks of data, like copying huge disk images between catalogs.
- Improved catalog saving performance due to optimized write caching.
- Other miscellaneous minor adjustments and improvements
