Search site does offer input form for future features; PDF advocates can give Google a piece of their minds.
One of the hottest trends on the PC desktop--and a very relevant one for
office users of PDF documents, which pretty much all of us are--is the spate of
PC desktop search tools that have been released, and are under development for
future “Longhorn” versions of the Windows operating system.
These nifty little utilities index all your files, return much faster
results than the search feature Microsoft gives you with Windows, and best of
all, the indices update themselves while you’re away from your
machine.
One of the large players in this arena is the popular Web search engine
Google, which recently introduced a beta
of its free desktop search tool. One big problem? It will index things such as Microsoft Office
documents and AOL instant message transcripts, but it won’t index PDFs. However,
there’s hope: Google pledges to add more formats in future versions, and offers
users a place to ask for them.
“Google Desktop Search is still under development as a beta product,” the
company says at its “About Google Desktop Search” page. We intend to add new file, e-mail, and
chat formats and browsers as Google Desktop Search evolves, and when new formats
are created and used. If there's a format you'd like Google Desktop Search to be
able to search, please let us know. We can't guarantee that we'll add every type that's
suggested, but your suggestions will let us know what formats are important to
you.”