 | Junior Member with 1 posts. | | Join Date: May 2009 Experience: Intermediate | | how can I determine the TRUE creation date of a file? I need to find the exact creation date of a file that was copied onto a CD. The creation date displayed in "attributes" appears to be the date that the file was copied to CD. My operating system is Windows Vista. | | Distinguished Member with 16,809 posts. | | Join Date: Nov 2005 Location: McHenry, IL - USA Experience: Enough to be dangerous | | Hi and welcome to TSG.
I don't believe that you can determine the dates for the files on the CD. The burning software that created the disc may have an option to allow the user to either keep the original dates or change the file date attributes to be the date that files are burned to the disc.I have also read that some versions of CD burning software may have bugs that change the date even if the option to use the original dates is chosen.
__________________ Chuck W. | | Distinguished Member with 2,315 posts. | | Join Date: Jan 2003 Location: mid-atlantic | | if a system or such file - maybe check the version number?
if this is a 'personal' file - was this info entered in the 'proper' fields?
[like with .doc, .xls, .pdf, and so on] | | Member with 49 posts. | | Join Date: Jan 2009 Experience: Intermediate | | My opinion is also as same as Chuck, the burning software may change the original dates with the date of burning CD. | | Moderator with 95,995 posts. | | Join Date: Oct 2002 Location: South Eastern PA, USA Experience: Advanced age & experience | | If the dates in the file directory entry are wrong, there is no way to determine the "true" creation date, think about it. | | Distinguished Member with 54,702 posts. | | Join Date: Oct 2001 Location: *Random People Pleaser***Sacra Experience: Having fun | | If the burning software changed the set then I bet there is a option in the setting to use the dates already on the file or the date the CD was made. | | Senior Member with 1,259 posts. | | Join Date: Nov 2004 Location: 40°38'28"N 124°13'27"W Experience: Hendrix | | Yeah, it depends on the burning software,
and the options you select.
I don't think CDFS has the same extended attributes
as NTFS. You might check out UDF instead of ISO-9660 CDFS.
But if you do, watch out for compatibility issues, and also,
you must first format the empty CD, unlike CDFS,
which writes raw blocks and uses a simple TOC (Windows
makes the TOC look like a directory tree)
Hop on over to CD Freaks
All your questions can be answered there.
__________________ Si Dios quiere, asi, lo mismo quiero, tambien.
Que sera sera, y entonces, debemos tocar alguno
que El daremos.
Last edited by gyrgrls : 24-May-2009 09:25 AM.
Reason: link modified to point to forums; typos
| | Senior Member with 1,259 posts. | | Join Date: Nov 2004 Location: 40°38'28"N 124°13'27"W Experience: Hendrix | | Quote:
Originally Posted by JohnWill If the dates in the file directory entry are wrong, there is no way to determine the "true" creation date, think about it.  | Yes, and once the files are copied to another medium,
the old attributes are lost, unless copied.
But if the original files are still on the hard drive,
NT stores the extended attributes in the MFT.
Just right-click on the toolbar - either Name,
Size, Type... etc.
Select whatever you like from the pop-up menu.
Then, you just drop to a DOS prompt,
call up attrib with whatever switches you want,
redirect it to a text file, and burn that file to CD along with
your data, provided you have the Windows resource kit
installed.
__________________ Si Dios quiere, asi, lo mismo quiero, tambien.
Que sera sera, y entonces, debemos tocar alguno
que El daremos. | | Senior Member with 1,259 posts. | | Join Date: Nov 2004 Location: 40°38'28"N 124°13'27"W Experience: Hendrix | | Quote:
Originally Posted by gyrgrls Yes, and once the files are copied to another medium,
the old attributes are lost, unless copied.
But if the original files are still on the hard drive,
NT stores the extended attributes in the MFT.
Just right-click on the toolbar - either Name,
Size, Type... etc.
Select whatever you like from the pop-up menu.
Then, you just drop to a DOS prompt,
call up attrib with whatever switches you want,
redirect it to a text file, and burn that file to CD along with
your data, provided you have the Windows resource kit
installed. | Better yet:
Just erase Windows and install Linux! | | Distinguished Member with 2,315 posts. | | Join Date: Jan 2003 Location: mid-atlantic |
27-May-2009, 11:38 AM
#10 | from post #3
EXAMPLE: a word document
- open word
- on file menu, choose properties
- LOOK at the pic
Last edited by daniel_b2380 : 27-May-2009 11:54 AM.
Reason: typo
| | Senior Member with 1,259 posts. | | Join Date: Nov 2004 Location: 40°38'28"N 124°13'27"W Experience: Hendrix |
29-May-2009, 07:41 AM
#11 | If it's .docfile in msword format,
then you can just enter the information
when you create the document, and it will
remain imbedded in the metadata.
But it will only be positively visible in
its native application, like Excel, Word, etc..
and not necessarily Windows Explorer,
because we are dealing with metadata,
not attributes. Hope this makes sense to you.
It's hard for me to explain, without being clear
as mud.
__________________ Si Dios quiere, asi, lo mismo quiero, tambien.
Que sera sera, y entonces, debemos tocar alguno
que El daremos. |  THIS THREAD HAS EXPIRED.
Are you having the same problem?
We have volunteers ready to answer your question, but first you'll have to join for free. Need help getting started? Check out our Welcome Guide.
| | |
Smart Search
| Find your solution! | | | |
Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests) | | |  WELCOME TO TECH SUPPORT GUY! Are you looking for the solution to your computer problem? Join our site today to ask your question -- for free! Our site is run completely by volunteers who want to help you solve your computer problems. See our Welcome Guide to get started.
| You Are Using: |
Advertisements do not imply our endorsement of that product or service.
All times are GMT -5. The time now is 02:24 PM.
Copyright © 1996 - 2009 TechGuy, Inc. All rights reserved.
Powered by vBulletin, Copyright © 2000 - 2009, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd. | |
|