What Are You Doing Right Now
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Doing pizza with Perseus my 7 year old.
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Credit Card Proccessor is down today... making for a prtty busy day
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Seriously how the hell does MS sell file serving software that cant put deleted network files in the Recycle Bin? This makes no sense.
User deletes a file from a network share between backup jobs or Shadow copy job. Gone forever.
If i butcher the Documents Library, then i can set it up so a network file goes to recycle bin. -
@momurda said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
Seriously how the hell does MS sell file serving software that cant put deleted network files in the Recycle Bin? This makes no sense.
User deletes a file from a network share between backup jobs or Shadow copy job. Gone forever.
If i butcher the Documents Library, then i can set it up so a network file goes to recycle bin.I can't think of anything to equate this too, but I'm certain there is a good one...
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@dustinb3403 What does this mean?
Im just saying their file server is lacking this feature, and it costs thousands of dollars. -
@momurda said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@dustinb3403 What does this mean?
Im just saying their file server is lacking this feature, and it costs thousands of dollars.It costs thousands of dollars to add this feature? I've never actually even bothered to look for this feature on any server system, but I understand why you're frustrated.
As for the "what does this mean"; it means exactly what it sounds like. You're expecting a system to do something that it was never intended for. But I can't think of an analogy to compare it too.
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@dustinb3403 LOL you shouldnt try to SAM me. Your response makes no sense.
MS charges thousands of dollars to use Server as a file server. They dont offer a way to send deleted files to the Recycle Bin. It would be trivial to add this feature. End of story. -
Just got off a 3 hr call.
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Submitted feedback to MS regarding the new Quarantine page in the Security & Compliance Center -
The new Quarantine page should have a "Recipient" column available for viewing. Also, the classification/reason drop-down should have an option to view all classifications/reasons in a single view.
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@momurda said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@dustinb3403 LOL you shouldnt try to SAM me. Your response makes no sense.
MS charges thousands of dollars to use Server as a file server. They dont offer a way to send deleted files to the Recycle Bin. It would be trivial to add this feature. End of story.OHHH I see what you're saying. I thought you meant that Microsoft has this feature as some hidden upgrade. My bad.
Yeah. . . no I get it. . . lol
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@momurda said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
Seriously how the hell does MS sell file serving software that cant put deleted network files in the Recycle Bin? This makes no sense.
User deletes a file from a network share between backup jobs or Shadow copy job. Gone forever.
If i butcher the Documents Library, then i can set it up so a network file goes to recycle bin.Umm even is the client that deleted the file put it in the local recycle bin (which would require copying a file local just to delete), no one else would have access to it. You would have to track down said user and restore the file from their recycle bin.
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If a user deletes something they just recently created... too bad for them. They can create it again.
Most places don't do backups or shadowcopies on file servers every 2 minutes in the off chance someone accidentally deletes a new file soon after they modify it.
Twice-daily shadowcopies and daily backups should be plenty.
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File server recycle bin is just dumb... i don't think anyone does that. There's just no reason to.
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If you need something like that, then OneDrive.
Does NC do it?
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@obsolesce said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
File server recycle bin is just dumb... i don't think anyone does that. There's just no reason to.
Buffalo and Synology NAS have that.
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@obsolesce said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
If you need something like that, then OneDrive.
Does NC do it?
Yes.
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Does anyone know what convention is required to login a domain using fedora, is it domain-name.com\username ?
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Just deployed new CentOS7 VM and fully updated (about 177 updates from ISO I had on hand) in the time it took for Windows Server 2016 to restart due to updates.
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@dustinb3403 said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
Does anyone know what convention is required to login a domain using fedora, is it domain-name.com\username ?
In what context? Logging in to a Fedora desktop as a windows domain user? Accessing a Windows share as a domain user? Assigning permissions on a samba share?
DOMAIN\username
[email protected] -
Logging in as a Windows domain user, yes. (2003 level... But still should work)