Harman Patil (Editor)

Lotus Magellan

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Original author(s)
  
Bill Gross Larry Gross

Operating system
  
MS-DOS

Development status
  
Discontinued

Developer(s)
  
Lotus Development Corporation

Initial release
  
April 1989; 27 years ago (1989-04)

Stable release
  
2.0 / March 1990; 27 years ago (1990-03)

Lotus Magellan was a DOS-based desktop search package, conceived and developed by Bill Gross and released in the 1989 by Lotus Development Corporation, most famous for Lotus 1-2-3.

Contents

Despite its effectiveness, Magellan sold 500,000 copies and was considered not particularly successful in the marketplace, likely due to the smallish hard drives of the era, and today is generally forgotten.

Operation

Running under DOS, Magellan would scan the directories and files on a drive or floppy diskettes and create a master index. It was aware of all the various current formats and provided the ability to view files without launching the original applications that created them. Its most powerful feature was fuzzy searching, that connected files by relative frequency of keywords, allowing the user to organize related data no matter where or in what format it existed on the user's computer.

Given this "semantic view" of the user's file system, Magellan not only exposed "hidden meaning" from disparate data, but also facilitated the actual movement of files and directories into a better physical organization. Advertisements that ran for Magellan at the time promised to "Get all your ducks in a row" and showed a picture of a line of obedient rubber ducks.

Fate

Magellan was one of several significant developments from Lotus Software (i.e. "1-2-3", "Notes" and office software for the Apple Macintosh) that, despite significant usefulness and market share, failed to keep the company from becoming another brilliant also-ran. Lotus was acquired by IBM in 1995. The old DOS Lotus software Magellan, Lotus Agenda, HAL, and Lotus Manuscript have since been released as freeware.

References

Lotus Magellan Wikipedia