I just started playing around with a program called "kdissert" which might be exactly what you are looking for.
apt-get install kdissert There is also kjots, which isn't quite as graphical. On 2/3/06, John O'Hagan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On Sat, 4 Feb 2006 04:12 pm, Johannes Graumann wrote: > > [...] > > I'm looking for program to organize my (research) data. What I'm imagining > > is something that would allow me to create a (file system like) tree > > structure with Projects on the top level, follwed one level deeper by > > subprojects (in my case: experiments or publications). In my dream app ;0) > > there would be required fields with any one of these elements (which should > > be freely configurable as to what content (data) type is required, > > permissible, prohibited for any given object), e.g.: > > - a required "motivation" field associated with each project > > - a required "synopsis" field associated with a publication (which would > > have to hold also a pointer to a pdf) ... > > > > All of this should be searchable and arrangeable by date, data type and be > > easily amendable with new data-objects and hierarchy levels ... enough > > request yet? > [...] > > BasKet is the nearest thing I've seen to this in KDE: > > http://basket.kde.org/ > > Unfortunately it's not available in testing right now, so you'd have to go > unstable (or source) to get the latest version. The stable version lacks some > of the features you are after, like the tree structure. > > Hope this helps, > > John > > > > > > > > -- > To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] > with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED] > >