How do you break the recycle bin… all it is is a pseudo folder that is present across all drives. All it does it recurse every drive and look for the path driveletter:\$RECYCLE.BIN\Account_SID
I’m not familiar with microsoft enough to really know what an internal file name entailed but, looking it up on other sources, it appears it made it so the files that appeared on the delete prompts were named to things like $Rxxxxx.ext which I’m not sure how could even happen. but yea the actual files in the can were named correctly, and they were deleted (or restored) as well. so its definitely a more minor bug.
There’s different levels of broken. Like a drawer that doesn’t close all the way still works as a drawer, and while I would call a drawer with its bottom busted out more broken than one that just won’t close, both could use some repairs.
How do you break the recycle bin… all it is is a pseudo folder that is present across all drives. All it does it recurse every drive and look for the path
driveletter:\$RECYCLE.BIN\Account_SIDI’m not familiar with microsoft enough to really know what an internal file name entailed but, looking it up on other sources, it appears it made it so the files that appeared on the delete prompts were named to things like
$Rxxxxx.extwhich I’m not sure how could even happen. but yea the actual files in the can were named correctly, and they were deleted (or restored) as well. so its definitely a more minor bug.Yup, totally broken then. Unusable.
Gotta love headline hyperbole lol
There’s different levels of broken. Like a drawer that doesn’t close all the way still works as a drawer, and while I would call a drawer with its bottom busted out more broken than one that just won’t close, both could use some repairs.
No one said it was unusable. This does sound objectively broken though.