The FlexDocs demonstration uses live software and live
data, not a set of canned HTML pages.
The demo begins with a startup screen which explains the
difference between searching for images or scanned documents, and using FlexDocs' powerful
Full Text searches.
You may use either type of search, or both types, in the
demonstration environment. Here are some tips on what to look for in our
demonstration libraries:
1. Attribute Searching (images, photos,
drawings, blueprints, etc.):
Select the Attribute Search.
Form there, there are four suggested searches you may want
to conduct. (You may want to jot these down).
Select the Engineering Library, select a
Doc Type of Blueprints, and enter the word Balloon
in the Keywords field. View the resulting images. Now choose New
Attribute Search from the bottom of the results screen, and try the next search.
Select the News Items Library, select a
Doc Type of News Clippings, and enter the word Banker
in the Source field. View the resulting images. Now choose New
Attribute Search from the bottom of the results screen, and try the next search.
Select the Construction Library, select a
Doc Type of Photo Images, and choose Outdoor from
the pull-down list of settings. View the resulting images. Now choose New
Attribute Search from the bottom of the results screen, and try the next search.
Select the Construction Library, select a
Doc Type of Memo Documents, and don't enter any search parameter values;
just click on the Search button. View the resulting images.
2. Full Text Searching (Text, HTML, MS Word,
WordPerfect, PDF, etc):
Choose the Full Text Search, select "Transportation",
and search on the word "roads". Note that the results
returned are from various servers around the Internet. (FlexDocs indexes only the
locations you want, not the whole Internet.) Note also the friendly user interface.
Select Library "All", and search
on the word "money". Again, the results returned are from
various servers around the Internet. Click on the magnifying glass to see exactly
where your search term is found in the document.
Try some other keywords as well.