And you can't always depend on that
File “Date modified” property are not updating while modifying a file
without closing it. - Microsoft Reduce Customer Effort Center - Site
Home - TechNet Blogs:
http://blogs.technet.com/b/asiasupp/archive/2010/12/14/file-date-modified-property-are-not-updating-while-modifying-a-file-without-closing-it.aspx
and beware of this in the Vista and post era:
Disabling Last Access Time in Windows Vista to improve NTFS performance
- The Storage Team at Microsoft - File Cabinet Blog - Site Home -
TechNet Blogs:
http://blogs.technet.com/b/filecab/archive/2006/11/07/disabling-last-access-time-in-windows-vista-to-improve-ntfs-performance.aspx
In Windows Vista, we've disabled updates to Last Access Time to improve
NTFS performance
On 1/23/2014 9:08 AM, James Rankin wrote:
I think there's a Last Modified date and time, but not user.
As Aakash says, enable auditing on the files may give you something to
go on
On 23 January 2014 16:48, Heaton, Joseph@Wildlife
<[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>>
wrote:
I have a request that just came across. Is it possible to have
Powershell go through a directory structure, looking at each file,
and gather the following:
Last accessed date (I think easy)
Last person that used/accessed (this is the part I don’t know if
it is possible)
Thanks,
Joe Heaton
--
*James Rankin*
---------------------
RCL - Senior Technical Consultant (ACA, CCA, MCTS) | The
Virtualization Practice Analyst - Desktop Virtualization
http://appsensebigot.blogspot.co.uk
--
Got your CryptoLocker prevention in place?
http://www.thirdtier.net/2013/10/cryptolocker-prevention-kit-updates/
Only three more patching days of XP.... are you ready?