Quote:
Originally Posted by knc1
 Clue me in, what does that command have to do with the thread topic?
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Mounting a drive with sshfs assigns it a windows drive letter. In linux, it adds it to a mount point, so you can access it directly in the local filesystem while also using SSH. Although you can mount just /mnt/us, I prefer to mount the entire root drive.
How does mounting /mnt/us over sshfs in windows NOT have something to do with the "How to mount /mnt/us on Windows?" thread title?