On 2012-03-29 3:36 PM, Miguel Medalha <miguelmeda...@sapo.pt> wrote:
Folder Redirection will always (I think - or maybe Samba has a way to
disable this, but I don't think it would be a good idea at all) store
local cached copy of those folders on the local computer... what it
accomplishes is it saves all of the copying back and forth when
logging in/out.

NO, IT DOESN'T!

Microsoft disagrees - see below.

What you describe is the behavior of normal *roaming profiles*.

No... you can use a combination of roaming profiles and redirected folders for the best result, which is what I do. The stuff in t he roaming profiles (very little) is copied back/forth at login/out, the stuff in t he redirected folders is *synchronized* at all times using the Offline Files technology that has long existed in Microsofts products.

Folder redirection *does not* move files back and forth.

Yes, it does, but it does so on an ongoing basis (except for the first logon). When the user creates a new file in a redirectd folder, it is saved *simultaneously* to both the local cache and the server side folder.

The files in redirected folders will always reside on the server. I
know this not only from theory but *from experience*.

Yes, but they will *also* reside on the *local computer*.

From the below link:

"Folder Redirection improvements in Windows 7

The Folder Redirection feature in the Windows operating system allows administrators to redirect user folders such as Documents, Pictures, or Music to shared folders that are hosted on servers. Folder Redirection is used in conjunction with the Offline Files technology to ensure that the user’s data is available when the network connection to the server that is hosting a redirected folder becomes latent or unavailable."

http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ff458273%28v=ws.10%29.aspx

--

Best regards,

Charles
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