Some users have recently had their accounts hijacked. It seems that the now defunct EVGA forums might have compromised your password there and seems many are using the same PW here. We would suggest you UPDATE YOUR PASSWORD and TURN ON 2FA for your account here to further secure it. None of the compromised accounts had 2FA turned on.
Once you have enabled 2FA, your account will be updated soon to show a badge, letting other members know that you use 2FA to protect your account. This should be beneficial for everyone that uses FSFT.
Out of the loop on this stuff and trying to figure this out for a new mobo. I am upgrading my storage server and need 8-10 SATA ports. Most chipsets for the 1151 socket have 6 SATA ports. If I get a board with SATA Express I can fit two more on each on these connectors and have the standard SATA...
Here is another link for working with file attributes. You are asking for some very specific things so I can't one quick answer that would do everything. If that archiving won't work I think PowerShell would be your next best thing because PowerShell can pull any attribute that you can see on...
PowerShell could be used to pull the information off fairly easily and build a database. You would then need a key to re-apply, but you could build hashes from each file using PowerShell and use that as the key to then verify later.
Below are some links showing some quick scripts to pull and set...
*update* Well did some quick testing...Uploaded an album to both services. They were VBR all a little less then 256kbs and one song I included had some small skips to see if those would still be there. Then downloaded it again. Google got rid of the skip so it seems they don't use the same file...
I have been looking at both Google and Amazon. I am confused as to how they process the songs you upload. Amazon says they will make any song 256kbs... If I upload a higher bit rate does it default to 256kbs? Does both Google and Amazon just scan the file and and use the song in their database...
I run WHS 2011 with drive pool in a VM on a Win2k8 server. Would it be wise to run a weekly checksum on all file in my drivepool to check integrity? Brutalizer brought this up in another thread (here) so it got me thinking. How would I go about doing this. Would a program like MD5 File hasher...
I did get sound working, but Hyper-V doesn't support audio passhthrough from the VM's. This was added in Server 2012 and Windows 8 with the enhanced session mode. Switching to Windows 8 might be the only option if I want to keep everything on the same machine. Unless I bite the bullet for Sonos.