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Use the xcopy command from a
command prompt. Many switches. Will copy ACL info. Also
useful to run tests if copying many files since on a second pass it will
only copy files that changed since the first copy. <br><br>
xcopy /? gets you a list
of all the switches<br><br>
generally, I use: xcopy <i>souce
destination</i> /e /h /k /o /y /d /v /r<br><br>
<br>
At 03:50 PM 7/13/2004 -0400, Dave Woodruff wrote:<br>
<blockquote type=cite class=cite cite>Hi,<br><br>
If you move a folder from one Windows share to another on the network, or
<br>
even from one disk to another on the same machine, the creation date is
<br>
changed to the current time. Is there a way of preventing this from
<br>
happening? Or perhaps to modify the creation date once the folder
is <br>
moved?<br><br>
Thanks for any
advice,<br><br>
Dave<br><br>
-- <br>
David S.
Woodruff
<a href="http://www.lns.mit.edu/~dsw" eudora="autourl">http://www.lns.mit.edu/~dsw</a><br>
MIT Lab for Nuclear
Science Phone:
(617)-253-6943<br>
24-030g,
MIT
Email: dsw@mit.edu<br>
77 Massachusetts
Avenue
FAX: (617)-258-6591<br>
Cambridge, MA,
02139
Call me Ishmael.<br><br>
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