What Are You Doing Right Now
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Just had a good laugh, here, let me show you the first paragraph
I understand that you are the decision maker for your company's IT Department and it is my pleasure to introduce you to our IronOrbit Hosted Desktop & Server Solutions. I have attached our Iron Orbit hosted desktop solution overview for your review. We have been extremely successful assisting Engineering, Medical/Hospitals and Technology firms with our dedicated hosted desktop and server solution. We offer a dedicated hosted High Speed Desktop Network including a server architecture where we would take on the cost of building you a brand new desktop and server solution. So we take the desktop infrastructure and the server infrastructure and build it on the same local area network, creating the same design and functionality as what you would have locally except faster, more secure, and much more reliable High Speed Desktop Network.
Good enough to make it past the automatic spam filters, just not the weak fleshy one.
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@travisdh1 But it's faster, I say buy now!
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It got quiet around here.
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@DustinB3403 said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
It got quiet around here.
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Back to documentation while I wait for Windows Server Backup restoration to fail.
Better?
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Looking for software that will list file names and paths at the 255 limit, and then truncate them down if possible.
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@DustinB3403 driving
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Not really seeing much that does this, which doesn't seem totally sketchy at best. . .
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@DustinB3403 said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
Not really seeing much that does this, which doesn't seem totally sketchy at best. . .
IIRC there's a way you can do it with linux that works great, but I last used it 5 years ago so... maybe it'll help your googling
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@MattSpeller It may.
The trouble I'm attempting to address (without breaking people's fingers) is that they save things with super long 255+ character paths, as they use Apple products, which apparently aren't subject to this limitation.
But our Servers are.
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Which of course has to be done carefully, as I don't want to break any network shares or files.
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@DustinB3403 said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
Which of course has to be done carefully, as I don't want to break any network shares or files.
No matter how you do it I'd take a backup (at least one) first haha
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Windows storage session. Just finished lunch.
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@Texkonc said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@DustinB3403 said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
It got quiet around here.
Some of us work.
Not us. Just someone.
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@Texkonc said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@DustinB3403 said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
It got quiet around here.
Some of us work.
OK @Texkonc sure. . .
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But seriously anyone know of any tools that can shorten a network path name? And not just in a terminal, but the physical path name.
E:\dsfbgsdfg\2314312363456\sdfgwesd\2011\452345\2011a\32452345 wsdfgbvw\23452345\
to
E:\dsfbg\2314. . . . . .
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@DustinB3403 my google-fu top result - never tried it
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@DustinB3403 If you are using drive letters to do this, just map a drive
f: to point to
\server\share\dsfbgsdfg\2314312363456\sdfgwesd\2011\452345\2011a\32452345 wsdfgbvw\23452345\ -
@DustinB3403 said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
But seriously anyone know of any tools that can shorten a network path name? And not just in a terminal, but the physical path name.
E:\dsfbgsdfg\2314312363456\sdfgwesd\2011\452345\2011a\32452345 wsdfgbvw\23452345\
to
E:\dsfbg\2314. . . . . .
Please tell me that some of that actually makes sense to you. Orders? Invoices? Customer #'s? Don't have to explain it to me. Just tell me you understand it.