It sounds to me like you are not using the OneDrive for Business Next 
Generation Sync 
Client<https://support.office.com/en-us/article/Get-started-with-the-OneDrive-for-Business-Next-Generation-Sync-Client-in-Windows-615391c4-2bd3-4aae-a42a-858262e42a49>
 that came out a couple months ago. Microsoft based that version on the 
consumer OneDrive client and fixed just about all the issues people were having 
with the old business client. It still may not be the best solution for you but 
I think you should see if you are using the older client.

- Stephen

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On 
Behalf Of Jonathan Raper
Sent: Friday, May 27, 2016 11:24 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [NTSysADM] End user data - local, cloud, home directories, and 
OneDrive, Oh my!

Hi all,

We've made a lot of strides to consolidate and streamline our infrastructure 
and data footprint....one thing seems to evade us - dealing with end user data, 
and I'm curious what you all are seeing and what you're doing with end user 
data.

We've moved email to O365, so that eliminates PSTs and the need for archiving 
(at least for now, considering that we went from a 2 Gig limit to a 50 Gig 
limit). We've moved 90-95% of project data to SharePoint, and so that all but 
eliminates shared drives, and it seems to work well. Most of our business apps 
are hosted, so that really only leaves one thing: end user data on the endpoint 
device and in Home Directories on file servers.

Originally (before we really understood the limitations of OneDrive for 
Business), we had hoped to be able to move all of that data to OneDrive and be 
done. Alas, the limitations of OneDrive and the design don't lend itself to 
that (at least for the users with more than about 100 Gigs of data due to 
OneDrive limit being based on the local user's available hard drive space. It 
is also not a fully baked product yet. We've experienced our share of quirks 
rolling it out.)

So, really, just about the only thing keeping us from eliminating file servers 
(which is something we really want to do) at this point is this end user data. 
We want to consolidate it and make sure it is backed up, but are wrestling with 
exactly how to best achieve this for a distributed organization with hundreds 
of users, many of whom are mobile. What are you guys and gals doing or seeing 
to address this need? Yes, we have many users using DropBox and Google Drive - 
we'd like to move away from that if possible, though DropBox Business or 
Enterprise is not necessarily out of the question, but it really does get 
expensive @ $12.50/$15 per month per user.

Thanks,

Jonathan
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