The only exception to this is nepomuk and strigi. I really don't get why they exist. Yes, I've read about the semantic desktop and all the features they provide. But they are really trying to address a problem that I don't have. I give my file names a sensible name and I have no problem locating them. I have some marginal organization (few folders for specific things like documents, pictures, videos, music etc) and I manage fine. There are about 60G of files (including backups from my laptop) and about 1200 files, but I never felt that I could not find what I needed to find.
I mean, really! Are there any valid use cases to justify all that effort spent on the so called "desktop search"? How does that make my life easier? You mean I have to tag them with something sensible? Why? That is adding more work for me.
Today, I found that nepomuk database for my 60G of files is about 2G. I've been experiencing freezes in Dolphin (I can see CPU usage shooting up for about 5 sec on my 2.4 GHz Core2Quad with 4G ram) whenever I change something. Someone mentioned that removing Dolphin configuration files helped. But, it didn't. My guess is that it is groping through that 2G of its file index and trying to update it.
Every time I start KDE, I get about four messages from Strigi saying it is indexing files and takes up about 10-15 sec.
So, for now, I've disabled both nepomuk and strigi. I really hope that won't break anything I regularly use. I'll keep reading about them to see if ever they make my life easier. But, I won't hold my breath.
Sam
PS: There. I feel better now









