Actually, our company policy is if you do not put it on a LAN drive share, it does not get saved, period. A few of us are trying out the desktop approach to see if it works for laptops. So far, so good.
Paul D. Seay, Jr. Technical Specialist Naptheon, INC 757-688-8180 -----Original Message----- From: Dan Foster [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Friday, June 14, 2002 12:27 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: Keeping an handle on client systems' large drives Hot Diggety! Seay, Paul was rumored to have written: > > What you have to do is revisit what you are saving and put in > exclude.dirs for all directories that contain software that can be > rebuilt from a common desktop image (hard drive replacment). Have > your users save their documents in specific folders and only back them > up. Then they just have to customize their desktop configure their > node name in the dsm.opt and restore the stuff that is backed up. > > This is the trade-off. Makes sense. Basic education + cost saving vs expense from a brute force approach. The trick is to have education that works well for a wide range of users, with differing expertise, and to also clearly communicate expectations ("if you save anywhere else, you won't get it back!"). Now that sounds like I also have to train them to not just blindly click whenever an application offers them a default directory (often within app area) to store documents in. Perhaps a small data area carved out on the hard drive, like say, 5 GB partition for user documents as Z: or whatever, and similiarly for other platforms (/userdocs/<user> as a symlink from ~user/docs or whatever), to provide a consistent and easy-to-use area for end user, yet predictable area for mass-deployed *SM configurations to use. I'm sure that the IT shop can help out significantly if they're able to preconfigure these settings within each application before users gets their hands on the machine. Hard part is when not every place has that luxury, especially at smaller places where end users may be configuring everything on their own. Anyway, the overall education/training approach is definitely cheaper than having to save everything on the HD, I do agree. ;) -Dan Foster IP Systems Engineering (IPSE) Global Crossing Telecommunications
