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Date:      Thu, 02 Mar 2000 13:11:14 +1030 (CST)
From:      "Daniel O'Connor" <doconnor@gsoft.com.au>
To:        Marc Slemko <marcs@znep.com>
Cc:        chat@FreeBSD.ORG, Alfred Perlstein <bright@wintelcom.net>
Subject:   Re: M$ one-ups UNIX???
Message-ID:  <XFMail.000302131114.doconnor@gsoft.com.au>
In-Reply-To: <Pine.BSF.4.20.0003011930400.36258-100000@alive.znep.com>

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On 02-Mar-00 Marc Slemko wrote:
>  I really think it is (b).  It does seem like a cool thing initially, but
>  scares me.  So now if you make a copy of a file for a backup on the
>  same drive, and a sector is toasted for whatever reason, you magically
>  lose both copies.
>  
>  It seems to me that this is a feature that was added from the 
>  "damn, we should have had links, too late now" perspective.  The
>  idea being that it is too late now to make all the legacy software
>  aware of links and make them deal with them properly and use them,
>  so they can try to hack around it.

The way it works is you run a magic wand over your system and it chucks out
dupes and writes links in their place (thats what the web page implies).

Greg Lehey wrote a program to do it for Unix :)

---
Daniel O'Connor software and network engineer
for Genesis Software - http://www.gsoft.com.au
"The nice thing about standards is that there
are so many of them to choose from."
  -- Andrew Tanenbaum


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