- Platform: Mac OS X
- Media: CD-ROM
Product Details
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Manage contacts, coordinate events, track projects, and prioritize tasks faster and easier than ever before. |
Substance, meet style
It's never been easier to get organized thanks to built-in links with Mac OS X Address Book and iCal, ready-to-use templates, and elegant themes designed by Mac artists.
Built-in Links to Address Book and iCal
There's no need to re-enter all your contact and calendar info to get started with Bento. It has built-in links to your Mac OS X Address Book and iCal applications.
In seconds, you'll be viewing all your contacts, tasks, and events in beautiful Bento templates that make searching, sorting and organizing simpler and faster than ever before.
Great-looking templates
Bento also comes with more than 20 ready-to-use templates. So you can easily get started organizing just about any kind of information you have--for work, home, school or community projects.
Add beautiful themes with a click
To make your templates look even better, you can add an elegant theme, designed by Mac artists, that suits your style and personality. Themes include coordinated colors, layouts, fonts and text styles that bring style to your templates with a single click.
Help stop spreadsheet abuse
Let your spreadsheet crunch the numbers, and let Bento do the rest.
If you're managing lists in Microsoft Excel or just about any other program that exports to Comma Separated Values, you can import them with a simple drag and drop.
Bento makes it possible to connect related information together so you can see a more a complete picture of everything you're tracking--all in one place. |
Bring it together
From contacts and calendars, to projects and events, you can organize just about every type of information you have--and access it instantly--all from one place.
Get the big picture
Bento makes it possible to connect related information together so you can see a more a complete picture of everything you're tracking--all in one place.
Bringing things together to get you organized--that's what Bento is all about.
Find what you need fast
Ever search for music with iTunes? It couldn't get much easier. And Bento carries on the Mac tradition by using familiar iTunes-like searching. You can find the things you store in Bento instantly. From phone numbers for friends in Fiji to deadlines due in December.
Display your information in a familiar spreadsheet-like Table View to see multiple records at once. |
Switch to Form View to see one record at a time. |
What's your type?
Because Bento is a flexible database, you're not forced into tracking pre-set types of information. You can store virtually any type of information you want in Bento choosing from a variety of field type options.
For instance, let's say you're putting on your company party and all your contacts are already stored in the Mac Address Book. You could simply add a "Checkbox" to your Address Book form to track who's coming, and add a "Choice" pop-up list to store each person's food preference. It's that easy!
See things your way
Just point and click or drag and drop to change the look of any form and see information in a way that makes sense to you.
Set the table, and sort it, too
Display your information in a familiar spreadsheet-like Table View to see multiple records at once. Sort columns with a single click, and get quick stats through the handy Summary Row.
If you use the Mac OS X Address Book, you'll appreciate this new view, because you'll be able to see many contacts all at once.
Forms flow freely
Switch to Form View to see one record at a time. This view is especially useful when entering large amounts of text, like notes from lectures, meetings and conversations.
You can also view different slices of your information by adding as many new forms as you'd like. And each new form can show a different grouping of information, so you can see your data from every angle.
Customize with a click
Resize, rearrange, and regroup to your heart's content. Just point and click to change themes, columns displayed, label positions, text sizes, shading, alignment, and more.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
48 of 50 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
It's a start,
By Joe Average (Lawrence, KS) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Bento - Complete Package - 1 PC - CD - Mac (40129I) (CD-ROM)
Bento is a smart, convenient database for the non-power user. Within its limitations it's excellent, interacting automatically with other apps (like iCal and Address Book) on the Mac. It also simplifies database use in general for those of us intimidated by full FileMaker.
Unfortunately, it lacks some capabilities a lot of ordinary Mac users will want - primarily the ability to sync data among multiple Macs. If you keep Bento on your desktop you can't readily sync its data to the same app on your laptop, or vice versa. Makes it tough for use in a mixed environment. Online discussions have highlighted this shortcoming, and we can hope the first revision will overcome this limitation. Meanwhile, if you do all your computing/database use on a single machine, Bento's fine.
33 of 35 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Filemaker's Bento a strong daily use database,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Bento - Complete Package - 1 PC - CD - Mac (40129I) (CD-ROM)
This is a fine product from Filemaker. BENTO creates an easy-to-use and colorful interface and has creative and well-laid out forms for data input.
Creating and saving new databases is easy, and it's instant interface with your Mac's Address Book and iCal will either come as a blessing or a complete annoyance right out of the box, depending on your level of perceived confidentiality of things like your personal Address Books. It can be removed, but it's there by default. Those reared on MS Access or dBase will find that there are some idiosyncracies to the way FileMaker works (and by extension Bento). Once you learn their system of creating and naming fields, and how they relate to one another, you will soon be off cataloging all your books, CD's and looking for other projects to organize. While this isn't as fully featured as Filemaker, it will serve 90 percent of data base users well. There is some rumor that it might eventually serve as the database interface for the iPhone when applications are one day allowed -- for now, it works only with Address Book and iCal for your iPhone, despite their advertisement that it has an iPhone interface -- it does not -- it merely sync's back with your Address Book/iCal which then syncs with your iPhone. Easy to use, sharp Mac-familiar and Mac-aware interfaces, and colorful creative layouts make this a sharp day to day database program for those who are tired of the line-by-line spreadsheet approach to database management.
19 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Mark Sealey MyMac.com Review,
By Tim E Robertson "Publisher MyMac" (Battle Creek, Mi United States) - See all my reviews (VINE VOICE) (REAL NAME)
This review is from: Bento - Complete Package - 1 PC - CD - Mac (40129I) (CD-ROM)
Bento was released by the makers of FileMaker Pro with a very specific purpose. Interestingly, Bento was the name given to a layer in Apple's visionary OpenDoc architecture launched with System 7.5 in the mid 1990s.
Bento is a personal (as opposed to "enterprise" or networked) database that's meant to be as easy to use as the Mac itself. It has a carefully-identified set of features. These run parallel to those of iWork's Pages and Numbers. It could have been called i(Data)Base to aim at a comparable niche in the market. Bento complements Pages and Numbers nicely. The criticisms that some users (and reviewers) leveled at Bento, that it lacked, for example, scripting, Automator and network support, miss the point. It was never intended for those sorts of uses - or those types of users; look at FileMaker Pro for such extended power. Bento was specifically designed and released without such features in order to concentrate on the less-experienced consumer and SOHO user. Some missing areas of functionality might be useful to the non-specialist user. On the whole, though, the balance between price and feature set, not to mention features, means that Bento can be safely recommended. Bento is designed to accomplish everyday tasks using a pleasing and straightforward template-based interface The very fact that it is simple, has only one window, and just the right number and design of a few uncluttered menus adds to its accessibility and effectiveness as a flexible and powerful tool. It only takes a quick glance at the lively, comprehensive and very well supported and moderated Bento forum to see how easy it is to achieve sophisticated date calculations and many-to-many implementation; Bento's apparent simplicity can be deceptive. Bento Users is another useful site. The documentation that comes with the product is excellent. Everyday FileMaker has compiled a list of some of the more likely projects that Bento can handle. These include: * what FileMaker, Inc. calls "virtually unlimited" contact details * coordinating events, parties, and fundraisers * tracking projects, assignments, and deadlines * prioritizing tasks; Bento has been used successfully in a Getting Things Done task management context * inventories, donations, and items for sale * track hours worked, payments due, invoicing * rate service providers and sellers * libraries for music, movies, and media * store files and photos related to projects and events and, rather cryptically, since this ought to be part of any good data model: * connect related information together to see more details. There are ample standalone products to achieve many of these tasks - Project Managers like OmniPlan and task management - the same company's OmniFocus. Bruji's outstanding BookPedia and CDPedia. There are dedicated time management and billing/invoice suites like TimeNet Pro - though none without some flaw; and iPhoto, Address Book and iCal themselves, with the last two of which Bento integrates closely. It is what it is So the criteria for MyMac's evaluation must not be, What's missing from Bento? Rather, how well does this reasonably-priced and robust Leopard-only product do what it's been designed to do? First and foremost, then, is a courageous - and largely successful - attempt to make database design and management accessible to those who are not specialists or experts in such software, but who still have demanding needs such as some of those just mentioned. Bento's main window consists of three panes: The leftmost pane is the Source List of all your data Libraries. Libraries are Bento's top organizational level - like iPhoto 7's "Events." One Bento Library is for one set of data or project. Under these in the Source List are Bento's Collections; these are like iTunes' Playlists - subsets of the data in the Libraries. Then Smart Collections behave just as you would expect: they're Views updated in real time and as your filter criteria - or the records that matches them - change. You might, for example, want to create a Smart Collection of all unpaid invoices - as they get paid, they disappear; or of all unsold artifacts in a craft store - as they are sold, they disappear. The records area is in the middle and is the largest pane. Data can be presented as a form (an individual record) or table of as many records as will fit into the space. You can have more than one form for any Library (each may display different fields - in different orders). This is emphasis on the user experience again; it drives the way you work. Each view is satisfactorily editable - columns can be dragged horizontally for display; you can chose which you will view too. The principles, of course, are analogous to those in FileMaker's "Align" routines and fit well with the sophisticated controls that Bento offers. The Associated fields list for each Library is on the right. Fields are created here and dragged and dropped onto the Records area. There are only three attributes for each. There is also control over how many of these three panes will appear - you can focus on what you're doing. This is a familiar interface; and it preserves the metaphors for data handling on which Bento rests. Similarly, searching, sorting, and summaries are all swift and intuitive. Searching can be very sophisticated and saved as a Smart Collection. Note, though, that this means that there's no concept of separate datastores in Bento. All the data which you use Bento to maintain is managed in one place. You can still share Libraries with other users. Yet if you organize your data according to "domains" within your life (household, work, hobbies, friends, you may find it a disadvantage to access it all in and from one place by launching the Bento application itself as opposed to separately-located data files. On the other hand, this is very much in keeping with current Mac practice: it is the way that iCal, iPhoto, iTunes, iWeb (though not Pages or Numbers) all work. More evidence of the perceived target audience; for them it is assumed the task in hand is more important than file names, file management. Data Types Given these intentional restrictions, the substantial variety of data types (nineteen of them) which Bento handles is impressive: basic text, numbers, dates, drop-downs, Booleans, graphics, sounds, movies, ratings, addresses, phone numbers and e-mail addresses and more. There's also a FileMaker-like calculation field which can, for example, concatenate text and multiple fields values as well as perform simple mathematical operations. Inevitably there will be some function missing for someone, but on the whole it's comprehensive - and very easy to use. Templates For all its transparency, Bento is not a glorified Wizard. Fields can be controlled - use drag and drop. Fields are rearranged and resized with the mouse - usual Mac style. Some positioning and alignment of text is possible using a toolbar - though probably less than most people will come to want: five text sizes, no choice of fonts. One of the biggest hurdles that the marketing of Bento has to overcome is to make it plain that these are flexible means to an end - although the (new) user's first contact with the program will be the 20 templates that come with the software. These templates are shells; they are not one and the same as the data which they are used to present. If the designers of Bento have understood just what it is that a majority of users want in terms of the payoff between interface and ease of use as opposed to in depth functionality, then they have surely got a winner on their hands. The number of downloads (a quarter of a million) in the first few months since Bento became available suggests that is the case. Address Book and iCal integration By default Bento has Libraries for contacts, events, and tasks. These are the same as those in Leopard's Address Book and iCal; they are not synched. Although these Libraries can be removed - "Disconnected" - from Bento in its "Home" menu, to do so is to lose access to those applications' data. What's more, to edit in Bento - or worse delete - data that's derived from Address Book and iCal is to lose it directly from those same applications actually outside the Bento environment. Integration is tight: you could drag and drop a set of contacts from the Address Book Library right into Bento's Source list to create a Collection. This "disconnection" could usefully be supplemented by a preference letting you work from a duplicate and/or advising you that you could conceivably lose permanently (unless backed up) data of which you might have thought you were only working on a copy. Import-Export Bento supports only CSV (Comma Separated Value) for import and export of data, although there are ways aplenty to convert that after or before the fact. So that's a limitation only inasmuch as you may need another utility and two steps. The importer is drag-and-drop then Wizard-based and worked very well in testing. The Wizard asks which values from the file to be imported should correspond with which fields in Bento. Relations The way that Bento handles relations - the fields in other tables whose data you need to appear in the current one - is one of the program's main limitations: it's not a conventional relational database. But, again, it's an approach designed to give the greatest likely desired power with the simplest steps. In your "local" Library you create a field of type "Related Records List"; then you indicate from which Library you want to use data. Dropping that... Read more ›
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