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Go to the DropBox settings on the Advanced tab, there will be a folder setting for the Drop Box
Apparently, dropbox uses Windows notifications about changes in the folder, but they do not work over the network, so synchronization will work once with symlinks.
The most radical option is to put the dropbox directly on the server (or share the folder of the local computer, then it will act as a server, as it was written above)
You can make synchronization between a local folder and a server one - the same Microsoft SyncToy (well, or any third-party utility, of which there are many) is quite suitable. Send dropbox to a local folder, and SyncToy will take over the synchronization with the server (and this will have to be done on schedule). Well, you also need to check that if the network folder is not available, then the data is not deleted from the local one - otherwise the dropbox will honestly delete all the contents. That is a kind of two-level synchronization. I would have done that.
In Windows 7, by the way, there is a built-in "Offline Files" feature (hidden in the control panel - Sync Center). It can also help (in fact, it does not differ from the above) if you find where the offline data is stored, but most likely they are not available to the user and it is not a fact that they are not stored in a compressed format.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robocopy
to the task scheduler every N minutes
I don’t know about dropbox, but you can easily implement this with the help of GoodSync and Skydrive. Synchronization locale-skydrive works floomby.ru/s1/R8mBT
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