Network drive letter assignments are completely arbitrary in the Windows world. Many companies have a scheme that they use, but there is no "recommended" scheme. My company uses 'G:' as a departmental shared drive, while 'H:' is the user's personal network drive. If you ask 100 different companies, personally, I would expect somewhere around 80 different answers. We assign the CDRom drive to letter 'Z:' on all our deployments, mainly for consistency. Some people have just a C: drive, some may have a D:, or perhaps even E: or F:, depending on partitioning, zip/usb/other external devices. At least we know that their cdrom drive should be Z:. Even with our naming scheme, I can never guess what someone is trying to access when they say "I can't get to my F: drive!" Or at least I can never assume to know what drive they're trying to access. Just thought I'd share! :) -- Dorian -----Original Message----- From: plug-discuss-admin@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us [mailto:plug-discuss-admin@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us] On Behalf Of Patrick Fleming Sent: Sunday, October 12, 2003 2:48 PM To: plug-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us Subject: Re: Windows drive mapping conventions Chris Gehlker wrote: >> Many hardware manufacturers use the R: & S: drives for CD, CD-R, DVD >> drives so while it might sound good, it may require 're-assigning' the >> letter of the drive on some machines. > > > There had to be a reason to avoid S: for shared. I thought the > convection was that optical drives are G: and H:. Many 'server' drives are mapped to S: in business evironments. My previous employer mapped the server to S: as well as a company they acquired (the acquired co used an entirely different server OS so that created its own problems) Patrick --------------------------------------------------- PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change you mail settings: http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss