On NT 4.0 you can kludge mounting multiple volumes under a single root using DFS (Distributed File System).
On Win 2000, you can just do it -- mount multiple volumes under a single root using so-called reparse points (basically symbolic links). Best of both worlds: you've got the drive letters as shortcuts, but you've also got the Unix-style hierarchy.
See http://www.pc-depot.com/neat/neat_971105_dfs.html
Your turn for free clues. DVD-RAM has 5.2 GB per platter; 2.6 GB per side. OK, you win, that's "one plus" gigs.
On NT 4.0 you can kludge mounting multiple volumes under a single root using DFS (Distributed File System).
On Win 2000, you can just do it -- mount multiple volumes under a single root using so-called reparse points (basically symbolic links). Best of both worlds: you've got the drive letters as shortcuts, but you've also got the Unix-style hierarchy.
See http://www.pc-depot.com/neat/neat_971105_dfs.html