Posts Tagged ‘Corruption’

How to Restore a Corrupt Hard Drive

Monday, July 20th, 2009

It would be good to know what may cause your hard drive to be corrupt. Most of the times, the presence of viruses is what causes it. The virus is a program that changes the original information stored in the hard drive and this is what we can basically call corruption.

read the full article

Windows Vista – Partition Corrupt and System Stops Responding at Restart

Monday, July 13th, 2009

Computers running release version of Windows Vista suffer from a limitation related to corrupt partitions. As a result of which, not at initial start, but while restarting, a black screen displays or system stops responding at all. Similar kind of issue is also seen with Windows Vista Service Pack 1, in which Autocheck.exe process hangs. Partition corruption causes data loss. However, we can recover it using Partition Recovery Software.

read the full article

Excel File Caused a Serious Error the Last Time it Was Opened – Error Message

Friday, July 10th, 2009

Microsoft Excel is a spreadsheet application that features support for various complex calculations, graphing, VBA programming etc. Microsoft Excel 2003 and earlier versions use .xls extension to store data in their files, while Microsoft Excel 2007 uses .xlsx as its proprietary file format. These files get corrupted due to reasons like Microsoft Office corruption, addons, virus etc. So, if you don’t have updated data backup, Excel Recovery solutions can provide key to repair and restore damaged Excel files and recover all lost information.

read the full article

Best Registry Cleaner and Some Points to Consider

Monday, July 6th, 2009

If your computer is showing significant speed problems, lots of error messages and frequent crashes, then there is a very huge possibility that the corruption of the computer’s registry is the cause behind all these woes. The registry is the part of the computer where information about all the components that find their way into a computer is logged in, and you might remember from your computing fundamentals course that the registry was said to be one of the most fundamental parts of the computer, without which there can be no computer to speak of.

read the full article

Initial Steps in Hard Drive Recovery

Wednesday, July 1st, 2009

Andrew Whitehead is a contributor at Free-backup.info — the home of the popular Amazon S3 based tool for online file backup — Back2zip. This article can be found at http://free-backup.info/initial-steps-in-hard-drive-recovery.html

First Steps in Hard Drive Recovery

If you find that your hard drive is no longer functioning, remember that a hard drive recovery is nearly always possible, so there is no need for panic. Data loss is not unusual and in nearly all cases the data can be recovered. Only in severe severe cases involving platter damage, magnetic degradation, or over-write of a file will the data be practically unrecoverable, and even in these cases a hard drive recovery by MFM photography may be possible if the data is valuable enough to justify huge expense.

Having said that, there are steps you can take to minimize further data loss and greatly increase your chances of successful hard drive recovery

Initial Steps in Hard Drive Recovery after a ‘crash’

If you find that you are unable to boot to the operating system, and you can no longer see the hard drive in the BIOS, there is a strong possibility that your hard drive has crashed. In this case you should shut the whole system down immediately. If there is some physical problem with the hard drive, it will be made a lot worse if you run power through the hard drive attempting to reboot the system.

If the head stack inside your drive is damaged, trying to run it will cause additional damage to the surfaces of the platters in your hard drive, and this is where the data you are wanting to recover is stored.

Initial Steps in Hard Drive Recovery after Corruption

If you have accidentally reformatted your hard drive, or accidentally deleted a file or folder, once again you must not write any new information onto your drive. The files you have deleted are still intact somewhere on the drive. Deleting a file simply means removing the location tag for that file, allowing that area of the drive to be over-written. If you add any new data it is possible that it will over-write your lost data effectively losing it forever.

If you believe a partition has become corrupted on your hard drive, it is very important not to try and re-install your operating system or add any new data to the drive.

If you have accidentally deleted a partition, attempting to restore it by formatting the drive will not recover your data, it will only result in the addition of an empty partition.

If you experience a single file corruption, any attempt to create a new file with the same name will partially over-write the file, greatly decreasing your chances of a full recovery.

This is just a short selection of the more common reasons for losing data from your hard drive, and illustrates that some attempts made by you, or even an IT technician, to recover a file or drive could decrease the chances of subsequent professional recovery efforts, or even make a successful recovery impossible. If you have any doubts about what action to take, just ask yourself this question: “Am I prepared to lose that data? “.

read the full article