Information science
Why we built our Search the way we did in SambaJAM

A key part of using a collaboration platform like SambaJAM is having all your documents and content in one central place so that you and your team members can easily find what you're looking for across your projects and organisation. Because we understand the value of keeping the work (AKA knowledge) different projects and groups have generated for an organisation (sometimes referred to as Knowledge Management) our next focus when we designed SambaJAM was the search to ensure everyone can find what they're looking for easily and quickly.
As an enterprise product, we provide full text search so you can search both the properties (metadata) of your content and inside your content's text while also respecting the security of the content to ensure users only see what they're allowed to see.
We provide two search tools in our application - a quick search box to perform Google style searches, and an extremely new and intuitive advanced search interface to allow you to build complex search queries to drill down to exactly what you're looking for.
Quick Search
Along the top header of SambaJAM, you'll see search box in the top right corner to quickly search all the content across the spaces you belong to in SambaJAM. Using the dropdown on the right hand side, you can easily change the 'scope' of the search so you can limit your search to all the spaces you belong to, the current space you're working on, or to only search people if you're looking for someone's contact details.

Because this is a "quick" search, instead of the search sending you to another screen to view the results, and losing the current screen and work you're on, the results appear immediately in a dropdown below the search box - and as with all our content, we let you see the thumbnails of documents so you can quickly recognise documents visually.

If you know part of the word or phrase you're searching for, we also support "wildcard" searches so you can use a "*" to widen your searches. For example, if you know the document you're searching for starts with "IMG" but you can't remember the rest of the title, you can use "IMG*" to find all documents with "IMG" at the beginning of their name such as IMG_4685.jpg, IMG_4686.jpg etc. You can also restrict searches to a specific file type such as JPEG photos using "JPG" in the search box as below:

Advanced Search
If you've ever used an Advanced Search form before, you're probably bewildered with a number of complex options and fields required so you can build complex search queries to drill down to content deeper than you can using just keywords. We didn't like this approach as it requires the user to understand what each of the fields do and generally isn't the way people search.
When you search for something online, you tend to type in a specific keyword or term(s) to find what you're looking for. If that doesn't work, only then do you want to drill down further to build your complex search queries searching on things such as where the content is, when it was created, by whom, and whether its a document, wiki, event or another type of content. We've re-enforced this process with the Advanced Search page.

Search results are complemented by a list of filters you can use to narrow the search even further to specific content in spaces, content types or tags. By dragging these into the query box or clicking on them, the search results will instantly refresh to show you a narrower selection of results, which should make it easier to drill down to exactly what you're looking for!

With SambaJAM's search tools, you should never again be stuck looking for the information you need to complete your work, and searching should be a lot quicker and intuitive to do than other systems you've used in the past!
Sign up for our private beta today to have a go yourself and let us know what you think!
Why we built our document library the way we did in SambaJAM

For years, we've been working in the Enterprise Content Management (ECM) space delivering large document management systems and collaboration portals for banks, global companies and NGOs. All of them used huge and complex systems such as FileNet, Documentum and (less huge but still complex) Microsoft SharePoint. And for years we never understood why it was so hard to manage documents using their clunky web interfaces.
For example, in SharePoint, a great product in manay regards which is why its become Microsoft's fastest growing product ever and used by loads of companies around the world for collaboration and document management, you get something that looks like this to manage your documents:
Its essentially a list of documents on a web page, if you click the arrow next to each document, you get a list of options you can do on that document, clicking one of the options opens a new window with a clunky form to edit or fill in. And SharePoint is one of the easier ones to deal with!
If you look at many of the start-ups in this space you’d think all of them would be taking advantage of the latest in web2.0/AJAX technology to improve on this web-page list concept, but you’d be mistaken. Just take a look, while the lists look nicer, they all still provide the same thing, a list of documents on a web-page which clicking on takes you to another page with all the document properties and forms to edit them, not really much of an improvement.
So when we came to design the document library for SambaJAM we looked for inspiration from what is undeniably the best tool to manage your documents - your desktop! By using the latest in web2.0/AJAX technology we set out to create a very intuitive, familiar experience for our end users to manage documents in their web browser. Some of the key features that were important to us during the design:
- Thumbnailing: Just like your desktop, isn't it much nicer to actually see visually the files your looking at. You may not remember the file name, but you may remember the front page had a bright orange logo. We've ensured all our documents are thumbnailed so you can easily browse through documents. However, if you do just want to go back to a list of documents (detailed view) you can simply switch views and do that too!
- Drag and drop Documents: With many users and document controllers spending a lot of their time simply organising the documents everyone else has uploaded into the correct folders so they're properly organised and easy to find, we decided the easiest way to move documents around was simply to select the ones you wanted to move, and drag them to the folder you wanted to move them too. Not only that, but like Windows, you can also drag documents and files into the folder tree on the left hand menu.
- Context Menus: Like your desktop, you can get access to all the actions you're allowed to perform on a document simply by clicking your right mouse button. All of the actions will bring up a popup form instead of re-directing you to another page so you can quickly do what you need to do and return back to the folder you're working on.
- Tagging: Sometimes, documents don’t also make sense organised into specific folders. That’s where tagging comes in, you can tag different types of documents like ‘proposals’ or ‘reports’ with specific tags and using the tag tree menu on the left hand menu, easily show all the ‘proposals’ or ‘reports’ in the document library regardless of which folder they’re in.
- Filters: Sometimes you just want to see the latest modified documents, the documents other people are currently working on or just the ones you're currently working on. By using the filter menu you can quickly filter all the documents to what you want to see.
- Online Previews: Sometimes you just want to read a document, or quickly open it to see if its what you're looking for before you download it. Sometimes you can’t download it because the document was written in Microsoft Office 2007 and you only have Office 2003. That’s where online previews come in. By double clicking a document, you can open another tab in your space to view the document (so you can still easily flick back to your folders if needed) and read the document online. If you upload rich media such as audio (and in future Video) you can also listen/watch those online as well!
- Versioning: The only way to ensure you're all working off the same version, and that no one's changes are lost is version control. We allow you to easily check-in and check-out documents to make your changes so every time you save a new copy, the previous versions are still accessible and can be rolled back to at anytime if someone made a mistake.
- Commenting: Easily write comments against your documents instead of emailing your comments back and forth!
- Uploading: Nearly every system I've ever seen requires you to go to a separate page to upload your files, and generally its one file at a time, during which you can't get on with anything else. We've decided that if you're uploading loads of files, especially large files which take time to upload, you should be able to simply queue them up, and then minimise the window to the footer so you can continue with your work and get notified when the uploads are finished. When I first used SambaJAM I uploaded several hundred files, and it had absolutely no impact on the rest of my work, I simply minimised it and got on with other things on SambaJAM!
- Online Editing: We've integrated with Zoho so you can create and edit your word documents, spreadsheets and presentations online without leaving your web browser! Not only does this save you having to download the file and re-upload just to make a quick change, in the future you'll be able to collaboratively edit the document with your colleagues in real time!

- Workflows: Workflows allow you to send documents for review or assign quick tasks like 'Update the logo on the front page' to other users without using email. By initiating a workflow for your document, you not only generate tasks for the people you want involved to see in their Tasks inbox on their Dashboard, you can also see the progress of how far along the review process the document is.
- Microsoft Windows, Office and Email Integration: I'm getting ahead of myself here but we don't believe you should actually have to log into SambaJAM to create and edit documents stored there. Wouldn't it be great if you could edit your documents in Microsoft Office and using its built in functionality, save it back to SambaJAM directly? Or map SambaJAM as a network drive to manage your documents in Windows explorer? Or map SambaJAM as an email account in Outlook so you can simply drag email attachments into SambaJAM? Or simply email a document into SambaJAM without logging in? That’s a few of the things that will be coming in later on so watch this space!
And not only ALL of the above, but all your documents are stored on an Enterprise Content Management system used by Fortune 500 companies around the world so you get enterprise class security, scalability, customisation and all the other features you'd expect from a system of this type!
Pretty awesome eh? In-fact something I heard the other day that made me laugh, but I should put as a disclaimer:
IF YOU'RE ALLERGIC TO AWESOMENESS - PLEASE DO NOT USE SAMBAJAM!!!
You have been warned... ;)
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