FileMaker, the eponymous maker of Mac OS X database software, first released a “database for the rest of us” called Bento in January of last year. The company then released a major update that brought ...
FileMaker is offering its full-featured Bento 4 personal database tool for only $5 through the end of July. That's a great deal on an awesome (mostly) iPad app, according to CIO.com blogger James A.
Apple software subsidiary FileMaker, Inc. unveiled a preview today of a new database product named Bento. If you've been waiting for Apple to offer an easy to use database as part of iWork, this is it ...
Bento, the personal database for iPhone, iPad and Mac, isn't long for this world. But have no fear; CIO.com blogger James A. Martin found three quality alternative databases for iOS. FileMaker Inc. is ...
Apple subsidiary FileMaker is dropping Bento, the consumer-friendly database app for OS X and iOS, in order to focus on its core products. The Mac app was first released in 2008 to generally positive ...
LITTLE ROCK — The new Bento database for the Mac, iPod and iPhone has some great new features: It’s a cut-down but still powerful version of Apple’s larger Filemaker program, which you can get for Mac ...
FileMaker on Tuesday released the newest version of its consumer database, Bento 4 for iPad. Past versions of the Bento for iPad have limited creation tools and have focused on acting as a means to ...
I’ve always found database programs to be a necessary evil. However, when FileMaker Inc. (http://www.filemaker.com) debuted Bento they offered a database app “for ...
When FileMaker relegated Bento to the dustbin, users of the occasionally maligned but rather excellent and exceedingly simple personal database for the Mac and iOS were left wondering what’s next for ...
New Bento 3 Personal Database by FileMaker Brings Innovative New Ways to View, Use and Share Photos, Contacts, Calendars, Files and More Popular Mac database integrates with iPhoto, provides ...
Long ago and far away — about 1982 or 1983 — there was a database called Nutshell that used the simple metaphor of index cards to let you store and use information. I remember Nutshell fondly even if ...
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