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FileMaker Gets Personal With Bento Database

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Some people who wants to arrange his or her life details in a computer database might be intimidated by the sheer immensity of FileMaker Pro. However, FileMaker, a unit of Apple, has a simpler and easier program called "Bento." The Washington Times' Mark Kellner says Bento may be a small step in the right direction.


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Long ago and far away -- about 1982 or 1983 -- there was a database called "Nutshell" which used the simple metaphor of index cards to let you store and use information. I remember Nutshell fondly even if it and the MS-DOS platform that supported it are only fit for computer museums.

A Macintosh Latest News about Macintosh version of Nutshell evolved into the successful software program FileMaker, which I think is one of the better database programs around, available for both Macs and Windows-based PCs. However, the sheer force of power that today's FileMaker Pro represents may be too much for some users who -- like those long ago Nutshell fans -- want to keep it simple.

What goes around in computing may indeed come around: Not long ago, FileMaker, the Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) Latest News about Apple software unit that publishes the eponymous database, released what could be called the 21st-century version of Nutshell, only this time for Macs running the latest OS X version and with some very spiffy graphics. Called "Bento," the US$49.95 program harkens back to what software once was: simple, uncomplicated and really, really useful.

Helpful Jargon

I can't swear that Bento, a name taken from those simple, compartmentalized Japanese lunch boxes, is a true "flat-file" database, but that's how it presents itself. Like those long-ago index cards, the primary "unit" in Bento is a record, albeit one that can contain a picture or other graphic, which can then be organized into "collections," all as part of a "library." Using such non-computer jargon makes the process seem easier than it might be otherwise.

Also aiding the process is the inclusion of a bunch of pre-defined "libraries" for personal, business and other categories. Need to create a super "to-do" list? Done. Ditto for inventories, donations, expense tracking, even a membership list for your book club. It's not rocket science, I guess, but it is the kind of technology many people can use, but would rather not expend the effort to create on their own.

Launching these collections is as simple as a couple mouse clicks.

iCal, AddressBook Friendly

You then enter data and can save the results, print them out on paper or export them as a "comma-separated value" file for use in a spreadsheet, such as Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT) Free Trial. Security Software As A Service From Webroot. Latest News about Microsoft Excel, or in a more powerful database such as FileMaker Pro or Microsoft Access.

Mac users who like to fool around with such things will also appreciate that the Mac's AddressBook.app and iCal.app data will automatically pour into Bento, making it easy for you to edit these files. Any changes make to them in the Bento database program will automatically update in the original applications . This way you or an assistant can do the updating and then have it automatically reflect and sync with your iPhone or Palm-based device, if such synchronization has already been set up.

The export capability also provides a way to move your data if and when a file grows to require more than Bento is designed to provide, such as a product inventory becoming much larger.

All this combines, perhaps even conspires, to become a way in which users can be more organized, more easily, and that's a good thing. The computer age was supposed to reduce complexity and organize our lives, but somehow that hasn't automatically happened.

This program may be a small step in the right direction.

© 2008 McClatchy-Tribune Information Services. All rights reserved.
© 2008 ECT News Network. All rights reserved.

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