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enderandrew

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About enderandrew

  • Birthday 04/13/1978

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    Windows 10 x64

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  1. Wouldn't that show me folders that do have mp3's in them? I'm trying to find folders without music, so I can delete those folders. Various programs have retagged and moved music files, leaving folders behind that are either empty, or just have an album artwork jpg. I was hoping to clean those up. I should also note that the free utility WinDirStat seems to do the same job as TreeView for free. http://windirstat.info/
  2. Many years ago I decided to rip my entire CD collection to my hard drive. I've bounced between Windows Media Player, iTunes and Amarok on Linux, each who've tagged songs differently, and tried to rearrange music according to those varying tags. I want to try and cleanup my D:\Music folder. I'm wondering if someone could whip together a simple script (VB or Powershell, since I'm running Windows 7 Ultimate, which should have Powershell) that can scan subfolders and report which folders don't have any music files in them. All my music is either in .mp3, .m4p or .m4a format. Thanks!
  3. I almost never touch GPO. I don't know where pretty much anything is in GPO. I often deplay Windows Server for small businesses here and there. 99% of the time, defaults in GPO are good enough for me and the small businesses I support. However, I have a client that I just moved to a Windows Server 2008 domain from 2003 (SBS). Now they can't process checks on their bank's website (which uses an unsigned activex control of all things!) If I log in as DOMAIN-NAME\administrator the site works fine. If I try to set the security settings to low for trusted sites, it doesn't keep, presumably because GPO is overriding it. I also get a message in the Internet Options dialog that the Administrator has disabled some settings. The users are local admins on their boxes, so again, this must be a domain GPO. (Not to mention that we didn't change any software locally on the PCs. We're just now connected to a new domain). I know this is probably simple if you know GPO, but I'm not sure where to look. Any help would be appreciated! Thanks!
  4. They're not using Exchange for email. Their ISP provides email. So we've had users lose their .PST file with a HDD crash, and lose all their email. We have no way to restore it. Thusly, I need the .PST file on the server for backup purposes. The last two companies I worked for had this working automatically. The first time you ran Outlook, you'd put in your Exchange details, but Outlook defaulting to storing the .PST on a shared drive. I assume this is in GPO somewhere. I'm still looking for a solution if someone has one.
  5. Perhaps this is a stupid question. I've worked for two companies where it seemed by default, Outlook looked to a network drive for a .PST file. The actual default for Outlook is to look in c:\documents and settings\user-foo\local settings\application data\microsoft\outlook How do I change this? Is there a group policy setting? I'm setting out a new domain for a small business and I was curious. If you have any other suggestions for tweaks you would make beyond typical defaults for a small business domain, I'm all ears.
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