At one time or another, you have likely “lost” a JMP table, journal or script. The file wasn’t really lost – just moved, altered or renamed. Traditionally, people have relied on creating a system of directories to keep track of files. There are a number of disadvantages to this method, the greatest of which is that the directory structure contains no information about what is in the files. We show a powerful and flexible file management application, built with JSL, which allows users to find data tables, journals and scripts using a variety of criteria. Topics include:
An interesting program possibility is available from www.thebrain.com or
TheBrain :: Mind Mapping Software, Brainstorming, GTD and Knowledgebase Software
The Brain's interface is a visual relational database.
This 3:50 video shows their product in operation:
Specifically, how can The Brain help a JMP user Manage & Organize JMP files?
Does it offer the same or better solution as the JSL add-in presented here?
I am working on a project to organize and understand the information on a server. I can get the requisite info from Mircosoft Office files (docx, xlsx, and pptx). I would like to do the same for .jmp files since there are a great number of those. I really only need to know the column names at this point. I watched the presentation, are the finished scripts available? If not is there an alternative method? I can see on my Mac when I preview a JMP file in finder I can see the column names. Is there a tool available that would let me crawl a server to extract that data?
Sounds interesting, but the video says 'video not available' and 'video is private'.
Below, you'll find papers, posters and selected video clips from Discovery Summit 2014.