Per the conversation about saving/sharing macros and the MVP document on
same.

Author Johathan West says:

****
They can do this easily, by creating a batch file, containing an xcopy
command, and getting the login script to call the batch file. An example of
such an xcopy command might be:
XCOPY [server path] [local path] /D /Q /Y /R /I /C /K /S

****

My question: Is anyone doing this in an XP environment with workstations
formatted with NTFS file system. My boss seemed a bit skeptical. We've been
running into more than a few permissions issues while making this transition
and I'm wondering if the suggested technique will work in XP/NTFS and if
not, what alternatives are recommended?

Sincerely,

Ridge (in New Joisey)

Re: Save Macros Query -- Network Issue by Jezebel

Jezebel
Tue Aug 23 16:02:25 CDT 2005

It should work. But why not go for a little empiricism and try it? -- Be
quicker than waiting for an answer here.




"Ridge Kennedy" <rkennedy@njscpa.org> wrote in message
news:%23$4ipeBqFHA.3204@TK2MSFTNGP10.phx.gbl...
> Per the conversation about saving/sharing macros and the MVP document on
> same.
>
> Author Johathan West says:
>
> ****
> They can do this easily, by creating a batch file, containing an xcopy
> command, and getting the login script to call the batch file. An example
> of
> such an xcopy command might be:
> XCOPY [server path] [local path] /D /Q /Y /R /I /C /K /S
>
> ****
>
> My question: Is anyone doing this in an XP environment with workstations
> formatted with NTFS file system. My boss seemed a bit skeptical. We've
> been
> running into more than a few permissions issues while making this
> transition
> and I'm wondering if the suggested technique will work in XP/NTFS and if
> not, what alternatives are recommended?
>
> Sincerely,
>
> Ridge (in New Joisey)
>
>