Tracking files you open and edit day-by-day for quick retrieval is a computer feature that should be a built-in part of the Linux desktop but isn’t yet. The GNOME Activity Journalattempts to fill that void. It has potential to improve productivity but needs more growth to be really useful. The Activity Journal was first introduced as GNOME Zeitgeist. It is a tool for easily browsing and finding files on your computer. It keeps a chronological journal of all file activity and supports tagging and establishing relationships between groups of files.
Hi,
I am one of the zeitgeist developers. This post has some factual errors and slight deviation from truth. I would like to point them out. I have written down a blog post explaining the facts and details. have a look
http://milky.manishsinha.net/2011/02/11/a-re-introduction-to-zeitgeist/
GNOME Activity Journal: Not a Big History Buff
Posted by: Jack M. Germain February 9, 2011 05:00 AMTracking files you open and edit day-by-day for quick retrieval is a computer feature that should be a built-in part of the Linux desktop but isn’t yet. The GNOME Activity Journalattempts to fill that void. It has potential to improve productivity but needs more growth to be really useful. The Activity Journal was first introduced as GNOME Zeitgeist. It is a tool for easily browsing and finding files on your computer. It keeps a chronological journal of all file activity and supports tagging and establishing relationships between groups of files.
I am one of the zeitgeist developers. This post has some factual errors and slight deviation from truth. I would like to point them out. I have written down a blog post explaining the facts and details. have a look
http://milky.manishsinha.net/2011/02/11/a-re-introduction-to-zeitgeist/