New live.com launched! (with screenshots on Vista)
Link: www.live.com
It looks beautifully, isn't it?
Comments
Anonymous
June 16, 2006
Not from Safari...Anonymous
June 26, 2006
hi
I've got a peculiar problem on windows server 2003.
At host A, I have a consistent NTFS source volume X(with a mountpoint) on a virtual disk on the disk array. Im creating an array based snapshot X" of X and make that visible to a different host B. At host B, after a 'Rescan disks', i could see the 'physical drive' but not the corresponding NTFS volume. The mountvol listing doesnot show that volume alone. Even after half-an hour, the system is in the same state. When analysed using winobj and dumpdiag tools, we found that the "harddiskvolume" is hooked on to the physical drive object but the harddiskvolume doesnt have any mountpoints associated to that.why is it so?
TIA
VasanthiAnonymous
June 26, 2006
The comment has been removedAnonymous
June 26, 2006
hi
Thanks for the reply.
I dont use VSS/VDS apis. I do create "array" based snapshots and not VSS snapshots. And this problem is infrequent and happens when this experiment is done frequently.
In such a scenario of non-usage of VSS/VDS apis, can you please tell me whats preventing the mountmanager to get notified about such a volume arrival?
TIA,
VasanthiAnonymous
June 26, 2006
I can't think of any reason of why this interaction with mount-point manager would fail. Maybe the snapshot contents is inconsistent as you create the snapshot without any OS integration?
Anyway, I would strongly recommend you to use a VSS-based creation of hardware snapshots in your array.
Advantages:
1) This is a supported scenario both by Microsoft and the vast majority of hardware vendors. If something doesn't work you can always delegate the troubleshooting to the support department, and they will be happy to follow up.
2) There are standard tools to create shadow copies, shipped both by Microsoft or third-party partners.
3) The VSS technologgy is pretty solid. Hardware snapshot creation is integrated with the operating system starting with Windows Server 2003, and it interoperates well with various storagge solutions (like multipath, iSCSI, boot-from-SAN, etc) and also with applications (SQL, Exchange, AD, etc)
Thanks, AdiAnonymous
March 26, 2008
PingBack from http://drinksnotdrugsblog.info/antimail-new-livecom-launched-with-screenshots-on-vista/Anonymous
April 03, 2008
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