Linked by Thom Holwerda on Sun 21st Oct 2007 10:57 UTC, submitted by Inkslinger77
Windows "Buried deep within Windows' bosom is a carbon-crusted fossil from the ancient days of computing. This aged wart on Windows' soul harkens back to a more primitive time, when computers lacked the oomph to go graphical and mice were nothing but rodents. I speak of the command prompt, whose roots lie in DOS, that antique operating system of the 1980s. DOS is gone now. Yet despite Windows' glorious graphical goodness, a wispy memory of text-based computer life still exists. It's a program called CMD.EXE, and it appears in Windows as the command prompt window. Believe it or not, the command prompt to this day still serves as a useful alternative way to control your computer. Indeed, there are some things you can do in the command prompt window that in Windows' graphical interface are tedious, slow or darn near impossible. Come with me as we discover how an old warhorse like DOS can once again find purpose."
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RE: Interesting...
by jayson.knight on Sun 21st Oct 2007 15:06 UTC in reply to "Interesting..."
jayson.knight
Member since:
2005-07-06

Google "Robocopy GUI" for a decent graphical frontend to Robocopy. It's finicky, but helps out with the plethora of switches, plus you can script it out after designing it for doing batch processing.

http://www.microsoft.com/technet/technetmag/issues/2006/11/UtilityS...

It's also worth mentioning that xcopy can do many of the things robocopy can do, such as the ability to restart failed copies, preserving file ACLs/attributes, etc.

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