Click to expand.With Marc's tool if you can VIEW it you can use Snagit or similar tools to capture and print it -- might not be convenient if your OU structure is overly complicated but it could work. [Just how complicated IS this OU hierarchy?] You could use Visio (I think it takes Pro edition, but Enterprise edition even lets you EDIT the results by manipulating the Visio objects). This is a bit expensive but works.
(less so for Pro, and maybe a less version does this too, but I seem to remember not.) You can of course just open it up in AD Users and computers and either export it to text or take a screen shot (Snagit etc.) OR you could write a trivial ADSI or LDAP program to get the structure and format it with Perl so some other simple language. Depends a little on how much you wish to spend, how much you want to work, what OUTPUT you actually need, and how often you wish to do this (e.g., once or every week), etc.
Click to expand.With Marc's tool if you can VIEW it you can use Snagit or similar tools to capture and print it -- might not be convenient if your OU structure is overly complicated but it could work. [Just how complicated IS this OU hierarchy?] You could use Visio (I think it takes Pro edition, but Enterprise edition even lets you EDIT the results by manipulating the Visio objects). This is a bit expensive but works.
(less so for Pro, and maybe a less version does this too, but I seem to remember not.) You can of course just open it up in AD Users and computers and either export it to text or take a screen shot (Snagit etc.) OR you could write a trivial ADSI or LDAP program to get the structure and format it with Perl so some other simple language. Depends a little on how much you wish to spend, how much you want to work, what OUTPUT you actually need, and how often you wish to do this (e.g., once or every week), etc.
The main reason is I am now up to over 300 books on the Kindle. It is a hassle to look through that many books to find one.
So I have them in collections, but I have about 25 collections which is several pages of looking for the collection. I also have downloaded two additional collections from Gutenberg containing another 500 books, mostly short stories. I will not put all of them on the Kindle but probably a couple of hundred. This will just complicate matters even more. Along that same topic I plan to 'move' the books I have read into the Archive. And again if there are 200 books in that archive it is just going to be very difficult to find them I know the Kindle is not a computer but I do not really understand why it keeps data in a 'directory/folder' format and then hides that structured format from the user. As Pidgeon92 said, the files are all in one directory on the Kindle.