This is a discussion on Top 10 list-help within the Linux Administration forums, part of the Linux Forums category; First of all I would like to say thanks in advance for any replies. Currently we do not have quotas ...
|
|||||||
| FAQ | Members List | Calendar | Search | Today's Posts | Mark Forums Read |
|
|||
|
First of all I would like to say thanks in advance for any replies.
Currently we do not have quotas on our filesystems at work. As a result, we have users dumping multiple gigs worth of data and never cleaning it up. We have files that go back to 1992 that haven't been accessed since then! I have tried to get quotas implemented, but my IT director won't let me do it. I talked with my IT director and he suggested that we come up with a Top Ten list of reasons to clean up old files. I've got some down, but thought I would post this message in hopes that others might have some good reasons. The reasons can be both serious and humorous in nature. Thanks again for any help. Ken. |
|
|||
|
On Mon, 9 Aug 2004 23:15:12 -0500, Ken Arnold wrote:
> First of all I would like to say thanks in advance for any replies. > > I talked with my IT director and he suggested that we come up with a Top > Ten list of reasons to clean up old files. I've got some down, but thought > I would post this message in hopes that others might have some good reasons. > The reasons can be both serious and humorous in nature. Thanks again for > any help. Ha, Ha, ha. Last company I worked for, under the pretense of recovering disk space, sent a memo out to get rid of any correspondence and documents no longer required for the operation of the company or obsolete programs and outdated procedures that was more than ten months old. Seems those can become a liability in the courtroom depending on the occasion. |
|
|||
|
"Ken Arnold" <kn6ald9@yahoo.com> wrote in message
news:0ZXRc.7959$5i4.5158@bignews3.bellsouth.net... > First of all I would like to say thanks in advance for any replies. > > Currently we do not have quotas on our filesystems at work. As a result, > we have users dumping multiple gigs worth of data and never cleaning it up. > We have files that go back to 1992 that haven't been accessed since then! I > have tried to get quotas implemented, but my IT director won't let me do it. > > I talked with my IT director and he suggested that we come up with a Top > Ten list of reasons to clean up old files. I've got some down, but thought > I would post this message in hopes that others might have some good reasons. > The reasons can be both serious and humorous in nature. Thanks again for > any help. > > Ken. HA-HA-HA Good luck. A year and a half ago we had some 35TB of storage and a memo went out to clean files. Now we have 150TB of storage and a memo just went out to clean up storage. Someone needs to add a new rule to Murphy's Laws. -- Angel R. Rivera aka Wolf ---------------------------------------------------------------- Please post all reponses to UseNet. All email cheerfully and automagically routed to Dave Null > > > |