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Digital Filing System
tycho garen | Aug 30 2007
Hello, I have a question for the hive mind, and this seems like as good of a place as any. I have a massive number of PDF files (I'm a student/academic type) and no really good organizational strategy for them. I've used DevonThink Pro for a while, and while it's good, I have some issues with it: - I have about a gig and a half of PDF files, and no really good enduring organizational structure for the files. So I'm looking for a new idea of how to keep these things organized. I've thought about solutions like Yep!, and Eagle Filer, and Yojimbo, and even staying with DevonThink, but, going through all these files is going to be a pain in the ass, and I want something will be enduring, and scaleable. I have a gig and a half of files after an undergrad degree, and I'm going to start a doctoral program in the next couple of years, so this collection of files is only going to get bigger, so I want to devise a system that can grow with me. This probably means doing something open source/kludgey, but I'd like to consider this more fully before I'm all rash about it. So, I'm interested in thinking about how to organize all these files, and here's my idea: Automatically rename all the files, with sequentially numbered file names so "0000001.pdf," "0000002.pdf" etc. and then start a database with the file name, the author of the pdf, the title, journal title the originating project (so like the class name, or paper that I the file entered the system for; this is often a useful data point for me when I'm hunting for something I don't know the name of.) Then I could dump all the files into a single database (for easy backup) and spotlight could do some indexing, and it might be pretty sweet. Also, theoretically this system could incorporate a book collection as well. The pros: cons: I guess this means my questions are: - Are there systems out there that do something like this that I just don't know about. I've been hacking around with PHP and mySQL (like most self respecting b2 users from way back when) for years now, so I'm kind of comfortable with that, but I'm not a really good developer type, so if someone else has done it, I'd be more than happy to use some other software. Cheers, 9 Comments
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Email them to GmailSubmitted by Bookworm on September 24, 2007 - 1:47pm.
You could email the documents to Gmail and put as many descriptors as you might need in the email subject line and body of the email. Sample subject line: Date of article | Author of article | Book or journal name | Primary Subject (or section of your thesis | Then, once you've emailed the .pdf to yourself you can tag the email. Tags could include: Archive, Reference, Active Project, Thesis, etc. (This would also serve as an offsite backup of your materials.) I think the jury is still out on whether to trust free online tools such as this with valuable material; it obviously shouldn't be the only place the material is stored. » POSTED IN:
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