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May 1996

Briefcase: The File Synchronizer


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Briefcase is a Windows 95 application for keeping files up to date when you have your laptop away from the office. In the spirit of cross-platform compatibility, Microsoft has now added this functionality in Windows NT 4.0.

My first reaction is some surprise. Briefcase is for users who are away from their networks. One area where Windows 95 still scores heavily over Windows NT 4.0 is in laptop support for such features as hot-plugging PC Card (formerly PCMCIA) and power management. Nevertheless, many users want NT on a laptop, and file synchronization is a big issue.

The basic concept is to create a special area where you can place copies of files. When you're away from the office, you work on the copies. When you get back, the Briefcase checks whether your files are the same as those on the network. If you've changed them, Briefcase can update the network copy. If the network has a newer version, Briefcase can bring the updated data down to your machine. If changes have occurred at both ends, Briefcase can offer a conflict-resolution schema.

Briefcase in Operation
Let's see how Briefcase works. You open "My Briefcase"--the default object name--from the desktop. Then suppose you create a new Word document called "Word Document" in a folder called "Source Documents." Screen 1 shows how easy Briefcase setup is.

Once you store the file copy in the Briefcase, you can leave the office. The Briefcase time stamps both the copy and the source. Away from the office, you change the file stored in the Briefcase. Because you're not connected to the network server, you can't change the master version.

If you change the document on your laptop, My Briefcase reflects that fact when you select View Refresh. The Status field changes to "Needs updating," indicating that the copy in your Briefcase is out of synch with the last known copy on the server. More accurately, the change in your copy's Modified Date reflects that changes have occurred.

Resynchronizing the file is also easy. When you're back in the office, just reconnect to the relevant servers and select Briefcase Update All.

A dialog appears that shows the status of the changes. The simplest option, which screen 2 illustrates, is to change the copy on the laptop, so the server copy remains untouched. The dialog tells you the Briefcase version is more recent than the network version and suggests replacing the original with the working copy in the Briefcase to synchronize the two.

If the server copy changed while you were away from the network and your Briefcase copy remained untouched, you get the other version of this dialog. It tells you to copy the file to the Briefcase, as you see in screen 3.

No Conflict Resolution
These two scenarios are straightforward. Briefcase detects a change in the date on either side and makes the appropriate suggestion.

But what happens if you make changes, and changes occur on the network? Because both sides of the equation have changed, Briefcase asks you to choose manually. The default setting is "skip," meaning that you don't want to update one version automatically. Screen 4 shows this setting. Two other options are the replace options already mentioned. As you can see, no conflict resolution is built into the combination of Briefcase and Office 95, so the combination's usefulness is blunted.

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