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More on gluing stuff together in Entourage
Merlin Mann | May 27 2005
The main reason I stick with Entourage for all my calendar, TODO list, and—to a certain extent—archival email needs, comes down to one word: glue. As annoying as Entourage is in so many ways, I love that I can basically associate anything with anything via the “Link” functionality. This provides a handy little landing pad for any task, note, event, email, or contact onto which you can drop any other Entourage object as well as virtually any item from the Finder (for some reason it doesn’t easily handle URLs, which seems kind of dumb: use .weblocs as a workaround). Entourage then perpetually remembers that association in both the linking and linked items. Got it? Group like with like, and then get to anything from anything (Steal this idea, Apple; use Spotlight). So, I can associate an email message with a TODO, attach a text file to a calendar event (see my article in June’s MacWorld), and even, apparently, attach Applications and folder paths to any Entourage object. Why is this last one so freaking handy? Lemme show you. I love recurring tasks and use them all the time for repeating TODOs that I want to just forget about until they’re due again. One such task—ironically enough—is my monthly backup of Entourage’s glass-jawed database. Now this isn’t terribly complicated, but here’s the steps I need in order to do this each month:
The beauty part is that I can embed links to the Database Utility app and both folder paths right in the reminder. When I get pinged each month, I can just open the calendar event, select all my stuff in the Links section, and click “Open.” Boom: the utility launches and the two folders open right on my desktop. No hunting, no searching, and no janky alias maintenance. Think about applying this same process of linking in similar scenarios:
Now if you’re already a long-suffering Entourage user, your eyes should be lighting up right about now, because this trick emulates several of the best features of the Project Center without the functional death march. No need to walk through the stupid wizard and tell it all the things you don’t need: just spark up a new task or calendar event, pop open the Links area, and start throwing your stuff at it. Super easy. Now, I know nobody ever wants to admit to their dark existence on the Entourage downlow, but I must ask: Anybody else doing cool tricks with linking? Got a neat way you keep your stuff tidy in Entourage? Share. 19 Comments
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With my understanding of how...Submitted by jrk (not verified) on May 30, 2005 - 5:41am.
With my understanding of how Spotlight works, shouldn't it be getting much more possible to emulate this in any context that supports URLs in 10.4? Because the mdimporter gets applied once per-file, databases of items must export individual uniquely identifiable files in the filesystem corresponding to each item in the database. The metadata associated with the given file corresponds to the item in the database of course, but also note that (as I understand), opening the file opens the item in the application which owns the database. So e.g. when you search in Spotlight for an email and open it in Mail, you're actually opening some file Mail maintains in your library which corresponds to that message. Same with when you open a calendar event or todo from iCal, or an AddressBook entry, or whatever. Doesn't this mean that it should be possible to link to any items which are designed to be viewed as individual items by Spotlight just by using a file:/// URL from anywhere in the system that supports URLs? Isn't that potentially all the system-wide glue necessary to make something like this happen? Now all we need is the added help of a nice app/utility to easily grab these unique file URLs in a nice <a href="file:///some/spotlight/file">Useful Name</a> format for arbitrary indexable items. As a quick postscript, I just noticed that dragging a result from a Spotlight window into a text field pastes the path to the unique object (for e.g. an email), and dragging into a file-link-friendly rich text field (like e.g. a Mail compose window) drags a link, just like dragging most file-based items out of Quicksilver. Still a teeny bit more glue needed -- perhaps an input manager or somesuch which can modify exactly how these paths/URLs get pasted in certain critical contexts. » POSTED IN:
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