Ecco Pro

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Developer(s)NetManage, Arabesque Software, Ecco UserGroup Members
Stable release
4.544 / 11 June 2010; 14 years ago (2010-06-11)
ECCO Pro
Developer(s)NetManage, Arabesque Software, Ecco UserGroup Members
Stable release
4.544 / 11 June 2010; 14 years ago (2010-06-11)
Operating systemWindows
TypeOutliner / Personal Information Management

Ecco Pro is a personal information manager software based on an outliner, and supporting folders similar to spreadsheet columns that allow filtering and sorting of information based upon user defined criteria.[1]

The software was originally produced by Arabesque Software in 1993,[2] then purchased by NetManage, and discontinued in 1997.[3][4]

The product offers three primary types of views – phone book views, calendar views, and notepad views. Central to the program's design is an outlining structure and the ability to easily manipulate information regardless of in which view it was entered.[citation needed] Multiple notepad, calendar, and phonebook views can be opened, and each item seen in each view can be a collapsible outline, with each line assignable to folders/categories which can themselves be their own views, text field, pulldown menu, calendar date (including repeating date), or phonebook entry.[citation needed]

Product functionality

ECCO Professional was introduced by Arabesque Software in 1993, as a Personal Information Manager (PIM) with a database backend.[5] This version supports calendar and contact data, as well as to-do lists, and allows integration with other software via import and export capability, Dynamic Data Exchange (DDE), Object Linking and Embedding (OLE).[5] A feature called "Shooter" puts a cut and paste tool at the top of the screen facilitating copy of data to and from ECCO.[6] The user interface is based on a "universal outliner" and folders, which allow the user to build a variety of views organizing related information of mixed types.[7] Data is stored as discrete objects, and can be dragged as dynamic links to multiple folders creating cross references.[7][8] Ecco version 1.x supports shared folders and outlines for network access to data,[5] but does not support windows workgroups.[7] Ram based, the program was considered fast and relatively easy on laptop batteries,[5] but a heavy consumer of system resources.[7]

ECCO version 2.0, released in 1994, added support for workgroups, including group scheduling via email systems compliant with MAPI or VIM protocols, and Microsoft Schedule Plus, and sharing of contacts, calendars, and outlines, as well as file synchronization and reconciliation via intranet connections or email.[9][10] In 1995 PC Magazine praised ECCO as a workgroup tool for scheduling and task management and noted its ability to handle free form data, but considered version 2.0 a "poor choice as a contact manager" which requires customization to match features of contemporary products, and lacks structured and complex search queries, good reporting, logging and correspondence functions.[10]

ECCO version 3.0 was released in the summer of 1995 with an updated user interface based on a ring binder.[11] Other additions include an Internet launch tool equipped with an address book containing links to over 2,000 sites.[11] Internet support for the Shooter tool allows the user to push a URL and title for a web page back to ECCO.[12] Searching improved with a query tool based on forms[11] and support for boolean filters.[12]

ECCO Pro version 4.0 added 32 bit support and OLE 2.0.[13] as well as integration with NetManage's Chameleon and Z-Mail.[13] Version 4.01 has support for Palm Pilot.[14]

History

References

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