The "C$" stuff is called "administrative shares", and is something you really want disabled for security reasons - google it.
The "C$" stuff is called "administrative shares", and is something you really want disabled for security reasons - google it. But assuming administrative shares are on, you can type something like the following from your own machine: open a shell, and type "copy \server.domain. Com\C$\path\to\backup.
Dump c:\local\path" , assuming the backup is on C: - for another partition, guess what you have to change? :). This requires that your local account matches an account (w/administrative privileges) on the remote server as well.
A better thing would be explicitly sharing the folder on the server that has the backups, which lets you control the access restrictions explicitly.
You could run an FTP server on one of the machines, and then use an FTP batch script to copy the file(s) you require.
There's some built in commands in Windows Server. I was actually trying to find what they are, although your answer is valid. :) – dotnetdev Apr 2 '09 at 10:45.
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