Error Copying The Machine Specific Intelligent
SERVICES Services Overview Education Services Business Critical Services Consulting Services Managed Services Appliance Services CUSTOMER CENTER Customer Center Support Community MyVeritas Customer Success Licensing Programs Licensing Process ABOUT About Corporate Profile Corporate Leadership Newsroom Research Exchange Investor Relations Careers Legal Contact Us English 中文(简体) English Français Deutsch Italiano 日本語 한국어 Português Español USA Site: Veritas Veritas PartnerNet Error: 1265 generated when copying the Intelligent Disaster Recovery files to the alternate location on a remote Windows XP machine. Article:000027660 Publish: Article URL:http://www.veritas.com/docs/000027660 Support / Article Sign In Remember me Forgot Password? Don't have a Veritas Account? Create a Veritas Account now! Welcome First Last Your Profile Logout Sign in to Subscribe Please sign in to set up your subscription. Close Sign In Print Article Products Article Languages Subscribe to this Article Manage your Subscriptions Problem Error: 1265 generated when copying the Intelligent Disaster Recovery files to the alternate location on a remote Windows XP machine. Error Message Error copying the machine specific Intelligent Disaster Recovery information to alternate data path.Error: 1265 The system detected a possible attempt to compromise security. Please ensure that you can contact the server that authenticError. When performing an IDR backup from a Windows XP media server that has its alternate file path located on a remote Windows XP machine, an error 1265 is generated in the alerts when attempting to copy the disaster recovery (DR) file to the alternate location (Figure 1).Figure 1 The job then fails with the message:The system detected a possible attempt to compromise security. Please ensure that you can contact the server that authenticated you. (Figure 2).Figure 2 Solution When an alternate location for a DR file is specified using a universal naming convention (UNC) path (i.e. \\servername\share), before running backup jobs on the media server, verify that a connection
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Marie Del Prado, Tech Insider Oct. 16, 2015, 4:34 PM 937 facebook linkedin twitter email print iStock Artificial intelligence (AI) researchers are working hard to make computers smarter and more capable, some in hopes of achieving human-level intelligence. The surest strategy might seem like emulating human intelligence or even mimicking brain structure. But creating an intelligent machine based on the human mind might be impossible, unnecessary, or even counterproductive. In fact, many researchers believe what's inside our heads is just one example of how to achieve intelligence — and not necessarily the best way. "An airplane flies in a way that's very different from the way a bird flies, but they both fly — it's the same thing with intelligence," Peter Stone, an AI researcher and computer scientist at the University of Texas, Austin, told Tech Insider. Cornell University's Bart Selman, also an AI researcher, used speech recognition as an example to make a similar point. "We don't quite know how the brain does it," Selman told Tech Insider, but the method "is probably more complicated than the way we're doing it right now" with machines. "The main progress right now and in the near future will be getting to a performance at a human-level without getting the details of the human brain all figured out." Some computer systems do take some inspiration from the human brain, namely the interconnected structure of neurons, to form artificial neural networks. Such systems can be "trained" on a specific task like image recognition with many thousands of examples. Over time, the devices improve at the task. Machine learning and neural networks have driven a lot of the recent successes in computer science, says Geoffrey Hinton, an AI researcher at Google and the University of Toronto. But in many cases, it's best not to mimic human intelligence or brain structures. While humans are better than machines at things like perception, reasoning, and object manipulation, robots already exceed human intelligence along very narrow dimensions. Machines have faster reactions times, perfect memories, and are superior to humans at crunching a lot of numbers. "In some cases it would be unintelligent to mimic how the human brain works," Peter Norvig, the director of research at Google, told Tech Insider in an email. "If the task is to multiply two ten-digit numbers, then using a human brain al