But there is another misunderstanding: There is no unimportant data, data is important or it's outdated, but then it was important at a certain point of time. When it isn't or wasn't important you wouldn't have stored it on disk. You can't classify data in important or unimportant. But you seperate in different classes of needed availability. There is data which you need it at high speed at any time and there is data that you need with a low frequency and it's sufficient to have it after minutes, hours, days.
phpMyInventory (PMI) is a web-based inventory program designed to keep track of all your systems, software and peripherals. "Systems" include: PCs, servers, laptops, network printers, etc. See the project page to download v2.81 or to read the change log. Some screenshots are available on the left.
phpMyInventory requires PHP 4.0 or greater and MySQL, and runs on both Apache and IIS webservers. It includes a number of unique features, including:
* A flexible permissions system. For example, you can give users the ability to only view PMI data, the ability to view and update that data, or the view to view, update, and delete data.
* A software license tracker. You can specify whether software licenses are machine or user specific, and PMI will count how many licenses you have left. It will warn you when you drop to zero.