Aangezien er hier toch wel paar mensen zijn die DC gebruiken volgt hier een handige tip om in die grote hubs te geraken. Dit doen we door het misbruiken van HARD LINKS !
Microsoft doesn't shout about it, but the NTFS file system supports a hard link feature that creates supershortcuts. Unlike ordinary shortcuts, hard links continue to point to the original files even when those files are moved. Unfortunately, Windows supplies only an obscure command line tool for creating supershortcuts. Hard Link Magic, a free utility, lets you easily create hard links from Windows Explorer's pop-up menu.
So what is a hard link, and what does it do?
A hard link means that whichever given file can have more than one reference to it in the file system. In effect, a file can exist in multiple places at the same time, without using any physical disk space. Editing the fundamental file of any of these references causes changes in the underlying file of all the others. If you're familiar with Unix file systems, NTFS hard links are the same as Unix hard links. In point of fact NTFS considers all file names to be hard links to the file in question; it's just that most files just have only one hard link to them. An NTFS file is deleted when all hard links to it are removed. This means you could create a file in one directory, hard link it in another directory, delete the first reference, and everything would be fine.
In kort .... het lijkt alsof je allemaal films van 700 mb op je PC staan hebt die in werkelijkheid slechts paar mb ofzo in beslag nemen
Je kan een fakemaker voor fake files downloaden op [Link niet meer beschikbaar] alswaar je ook wat meer info kan lezen
Microsoft doesn't shout about it, but the NTFS file system supports a hard link feature that creates supershortcuts. Unlike ordinary shortcuts, hard links continue to point to the original files even when those files are moved. Unfortunately, Windows supplies only an obscure command line tool for creating supershortcuts. Hard Link Magic, a free utility, lets you easily create hard links from Windows Explorer's pop-up menu.
So what is a hard link, and what does it do?
A hard link means that whichever given file can have more than one reference to it in the file system. In effect, a file can exist in multiple places at the same time, without using any physical disk space. Editing the fundamental file of any of these references causes changes in the underlying file of all the others. If you're familiar with Unix file systems, NTFS hard links are the same as Unix hard links. In point of fact NTFS considers all file names to be hard links to the file in question; it's just that most files just have only one hard link to them. An NTFS file is deleted when all hard links to it are removed. This means you could create a file in one directory, hard link it in another directory, delete the first reference, and everything would be fine.
In kort .... het lijkt alsof je allemaal films van 700 mb op je PC staan hebt die in werkelijkheid slechts paar mb ofzo in beslag nemen
Je kan een fakemaker voor fake files downloaden op [Link niet meer beschikbaar] alswaar je ook wat meer info kan lezen

