F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Mapping network drives on a single device

Mapping network drives on a single device

Mapping network drives on a single device

G
gialpha
Junior Member
43
09-16-2016, 06:33 AM
#1
I have a OneDrive account with 5TB of storage. I was wondering if I could use that space as an external drive. After some research, I found a method called "Network Mapping," but it’s showing an error. I added it to my trusted sites through Internet Options and even lowered my security settings to medium. I did this based on what ChatGPT suggested. I’m having trouble finding a solution. It would be really helpful if you could assist me.
G
gialpha
09-16-2016, 06:33 AM #1

I have a OneDrive account with 5TB of storage. I was wondering if I could use that space as an external drive. After some research, I found a method called "Network Mapping," but it’s showing an error. I added it to my trusted sites through Internet Options and even lowered my security settings to medium. I did this based on what ChatGPT suggested. I’m having trouble finding a solution. It would be really helpful if you could assist me.

B
blondeminion
Senior Member
594
09-18-2016, 11:00 PM
#2
OneDrive automatically assigns itself to a folder within your user profile. You can link a drive letter to this folder using the subst command. https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/window...ands/subst That won’t behave identically to an external hard drive, because you’ll retain local copies of files, which is normal for OneDrive. You’re not connecting OneDrive directly via SMB as a standalone file server.
B
blondeminion
09-18-2016, 11:00 PM #2

OneDrive automatically assigns itself to a folder within your user profile. You can link a drive letter to this folder using the subst command. https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/window...ands/subst That won’t behave identically to an external hard drive, because you’ll retain local copies of files, which is normal for OneDrive. You’re not connecting OneDrive directly via SMB as a standalone file server.

8
88lucky
Member
67
09-21-2016, 05:58 AM
#3
I get it now. It seems like it was just copying my C drive, but nothing new actually happened. You mentioned an online drive linked to your PC, similar to a Google Drive partition.
8
88lucky
09-21-2016, 05:58 AM #3

I get it now. It seems like it was just copying my C drive, but nothing new actually happened. You mentioned an online drive linked to your PC, similar to a Google Drive partition.

S
Setlment
Member
70
09-22-2016, 07:16 PM
#4
Google Drive behaves differently in this scenario. (The same applies to Dropbox.) They store files locally on your device. Items you don’t use are removed from the local version, though their symbols stay. When you access them later, they’re quietly transferred to your system. Google Drive appears to simulate a large storage capacity attached to your computer.
S
Setlment
09-22-2016, 07:16 PM #4

Google Drive behaves differently in this scenario. (The same applies to Dropbox.) They store files locally on your device. Items you don’t use are removed from the local version, though their symbols stay. When you access them later, they’re quietly transferred to your system. Google Drive appears to simulate a large storage capacity attached to your computer.