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	<title>Comments on: MacVoices #1066: Joe Kissell Helps You Get Started with DEVONthink</title>
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	<link>http://www.macvoices.com/wordpress/macvoices-1066-joe-kissell-helps-you-get-started-with-devonthink/</link>
	<description>Chuck Joiner talks with the most interesting and influential people in the Mac industry, as well as the individuals who are out there making it happen on the front lines of the global Apple community.</description>
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		<title>By: Earthlaw</title>
		<link>http://www.macvoices.com/wordpress/macvoices-1066-joe-kissell-helps-you-get-started-with-devonthink/#comment-47229</link>
		<dc:creator>Earthlaw</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sun, 28 Mar 2010 00:20:45 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description>I have used DevonThink Pro for a number of years. Unfortunately, this interview does not reveal the depth or breadth of DevonThink. It is not just a tinkerer&#039;s scrapbook. This interview--presumably the author&#039;s book as well--merely skims the surface of this application.

DevonThink is an information manager with great depth. When you get information that you want to save for later reference--whether that is an email, a web page, a pdf file, or a writing that you create yourself--all of this can be stored and indexed for easy search and recall in DevonThink.

The application is also quite easy to use initially. You can store and index things easily--because the structure of the application tracks the ease and familiarity of the Finder. 

By now, most of us have thousands of documents and writings on the hard drives of our computers. DevonThink can index these files--even your entire hard drive--and incorporate the index of those files within the DevonThink Database so that you can search and find, within DevonThink, all the files on your entire hard drive. BTW, you can do that in a much more refined way than you can with Spotlight.

After using DevonThink for a number of years, I have the appreciation that I am using only a small portion of the capability of the application, and I want to use more of its complexity. I was hoping that Joe Kissell&#039;s book might help me plumb the depths of the application. After listening to this interview, however, I doubt that the book will be helpful to me, and I will look elsewhere.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I have used DevonThink Pro for a number of years. Unfortunately, this interview does not reveal the depth or breadth of DevonThink. It is not just a tinkerer&#8217;s scrapbook. This interview&#8211;presumably the author&#8217;s book as well&#8211;merely skims the surface of this application.</p>
<p>DevonThink is an information manager with great depth. When you get information that you want to save for later reference&#8211;whether that is an email, a web page, a pdf file, or a writing that you create yourself&#8211;all of this can be stored and indexed for easy search and recall in DevonThink.</p>
<p>The application is also quite easy to use initially. You can store and index things easily&#8211;because the structure of the application tracks the ease and familiarity of the Finder. </p>
<p>By now, most of us have thousands of documents and writings on the hard drives of our computers. DevonThink can index these files&#8211;even your entire hard drive&#8211;and incorporate the index of those files within the DevonThink Database so that you can search and find, within DevonThink, all the files on your entire hard drive. BTW, you can do that in a much more refined way than you can with Spotlight.</p>
<p>After using DevonThink for a number of years, I have the appreciation that I am using only a small portion of the capability of the application, and I want to use more of its complexity. I was hoping that Joe Kissell&#8217;s book might help me plumb the depths of the application. After listening to this interview, however, I doubt that the book will be helpful to me, and I will look elsewhere.</p>
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