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Yup.

MacOS does an OK job of helping the user find things with Spotlight, but it's not a full metadata system like BFS had.

Mail.app, for example, keeps each message in a separate file[0] (and probably has a cache or separate database of this to make displaying mailboxes quicker). This makes it easy for Spotlight to index, but all of the stuff that you'd think of as metadata is actually just regular data inside the .emlx file.

If Apple made a huge effort to start treating the metadata (assuming the infrastructure described in the Ars Technica article still exists) as a first class citizen and using it like BeOS did, maybe we can get there. This would be a drastic rethink though. It feels like files, in some ways, are becoming second-class citizens in the Mac world. Photos, for example, are managed in the Photos app - you do not go into the filesystem and organize your photos.

One big problem with filesystem metadata is how do you transfer it? The Ars article showed a sidecar file (._filename) being created when the file was copied to a non-HFS volume. Now the metadata is detached from the file and we're back to the same problem.

[0] http://mike.laiosa.org/2009/03/01/emlx.html



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