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The network drives are a digital storage space for your files. They exist on the Drew University servers and act just like the C: drive on your personal computer. You must be connected to the Drew University servers in order to have access to them. This means that, on campus, your computer must be using a network cable or be connected to the drew1x wireless network - the drew wireless network will not allow you to connect to the network drives.
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If you do not see your network drives, first restart your computer. This actually resolves the problem 9 times out of 10. If you do not see your network drives after a restart, make sure you are either plugged in with a network cable or are connected to drew1x if on campus. If you are off campus, you cannot see your network drives unless you CloudPC or MyFiles. |
The F: Drive
The F: drive is your personal network drive, a place on the Drew University servers where you can store files. We strongly recommend backing up your important files on the F: drive (or one of the departmental drives, as appropriate)! Even if your computer is destroyed, the files saved to the F: drive will remain available.
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Computer Provided by Drew
Windows
- Navigate to Computer This PC or File Explorer (in Windows 710)
- Select the F: drive in the Network Locations section or type F: into the search address bar of the Start menu File Explorer and hit Enter.
Mac
- Open Finder
- In the Favorites list on the left, click on the "Drew Network" folder
- Open your F: drive from the main window.
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- MyFiles (myfiles.drew.edu)
- Connecting a Windows computer to Drew Network Drives on campus
- Connecting a Mac computer to Drew Network Drives on campus
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The U: Drive
The U: drive is the campus shared drive. People are only able to access the folders here that they have been granted permissions to see.
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- Read - Permits viewing and listing of files and subfolders
- Write - Permits adding of files and subfolders
- Read & execute - Permits viewing and listing of files and subfolders as well as executing of files; inherited by files and folders
- List folder contents - Permits viewing and listing of files and subfolders as well as executing of files; inherited by folders only
- Modify - Permits reading and writing of files and subfolders; allows deletion of the folder
- Full Control - Permits reading, writing, changing, and deleting of files and subfolders
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To grant other users permissions to your folders
The U: drive can be accessed the same way as the F: drive. Warning | .
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The Employee Network Drives (G, O, and P)
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On a PC, the C: drive is a representation of your computer’s hard drive and is where files and programs are saved by default. As long as you have your computer with you, the C: drive is available.
The I: Drive
On a laptop PC issued by Drew University, there is also an I: drive, a partition of the C: drive. If you save a file (but not a program) on these laptops, it will go to the I: drive by default. Because of this, if the C: drive becomes corrupt and must be reimaged, files saved in the I: drive can sometimes be maintained. If the hard drive itself is damaged, the files cannot always be recovered from either the C: or the I: drives. As long as you have your computer with you, the I: drive is available.
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Related Pages
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Reviewed 7/25/24