/n is remote servers. /mnt/is local.

On 8/17/06, csant <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Speaking of file structures - I have (in vane) tried to find some doc on
what the rationale behind /mnt vs /n is (or rather: what exactly goes in
/n ?). I *think* I know what the difference is, but I wanted to find some
documentation on it. Anybody'd have apointer, please? (or a quick answer?)
:)

/c

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