August 18th, 2008, 10:39
August 18th, 2008, 10:45
August 18th, 2008, 20:47
August 18th, 2008, 21:31
August 19th, 2008, 6:42
hddguy wrote:What OS are you using? I am assuming you are running Windows, and NTFS filesystem. You are right that when data is deleted it is still recoverable, because until the specific location the deleted data occupies is written to with new information, the old information is still recoverable.
You must ensure that no new information is written to the disk. This includes surfing the web, as even files as small as temporary internet files written to the location the required data was at would render your data unrecoverable, or corrupt at the very least.
The best way is to hook your disk up to a second machine, and use commercial software available on the web to search for your lost data. You must make sure that the software you choose is non-destructive, and read only. Secondly, never recover data to the disk you are recovering from - that is just silly! Alternatively you can use a recovery CD such as MiniPE, or BART and recover your data to an external location such as a USB disk.
But I must stress, it is so easy to make a small mistake that will render your data unrecoverable. If data really is valuable to you, let someone who has done this a thousand times do it for you.
Your Data, Your choice
August 19th, 2008, 6:43
wiseleo wrote:Step 1. Check the recycle bin.
Step 2. Make a sector-level backup of the disk by removing the disk and placing it in another system. You will need at least as much space on another drive on which you'll write the image as the original drive. You can use an external drive. Buy one, if you don't yet have a backup drive. Avoid MyBook (I see too many of them). If the disk is healthy, driveimagexml from http://www.runtime.org will do the trick. Make sure the external drive is formatted with NTFS as they are usually pre-formatted with FAT32, which won't work for large images if they are stored as a single file.
Step 3. http://www.ntfsundelete.com http://www.recuva.com http://www.cgsecurity.org or commercial recovery software (r-studio, active@ undelete, easyrecovery, ufs explorer, and a bunch of others)
Do not attempt to run CHKDSK, defrag, or any other similar utilities that claim to fix drives as you will definitely have a problem finding your data after that.
If you hear any loud noises from the disk, discontinue immediately and call someone who can help.
While it may be tempting to take shortcuts, don't. Do not recover data to the same drive on which it was lost. An external backup drive works fine for that purpose.
August 19th, 2008, 7:45
August 19th, 2008, 8:04
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