Posts Tagged ‘Hard Drive’

Data Recovery Myths – Drop It & Hit It

Saturday, July 25th, 2009

The first thing most people do is find a spare machine or drive to a friend’s house searching for the answers on the Internet. Unfortunately for the misguided person, the Internet has incorporated many myths regarding data recovery and how to juggle a broken hard drive back into motion. There are about a half dozen popular myths circulating the Internet, and if the desperate user follows some of this very bad, yet popular, advice they may find their data loss to be more severe than when the hard drive first crashed. This article covers one of the more popular myths that somehow circulated the Internet – Hit It and Drop It.

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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.

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How to Protect Against Data Loss From System Crashes

Wednesday, July 15th, 2009

Very often, when a person’s system crashes, there is a great amount of data loss as a result of having to format your hard drive and re-install Windows. Few people have the resources to “slave” the drive on another computer and extract their valuable information before redoing the system. Microsoft has done a wonderful job in designing operating systems, but therein lies the trap!

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Registry Cleaner For Vista – What Every Windows Vista Owner Must Know

Tuesday, July 14th, 2009

If your Windows computer has begun turning up strange errors and just keeps getting slower and slower, you may be wondering what’s wrong. Before you format the hard drive or shop around for a new computer, think about a registry cleaner for Vista or XP! Running registry cleaners could help repair what’s essentially the backbone of your computer. It can make a big difference and help you save lots of money in the long run.

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The Principles of File Recovery

Tuesday, July 7th, 2009

Andrew Whitehead is a contributor at Free-backup.info — the home of the popular tool for windows online backup — Back2zip. This article can be found at http://free-backup.info/the-principles-of-file-recovery.html

Why File Recovery is Possible

File recovery is nearly always possible, if you spot the mistake and do something about it fast enough. Luckily, if you do mistakenly delete a file, the file has not been physically removed, the operating system just doesn’t know where it is anymore. This is easier to understand once you realize that there is more to storing a file on your hard drive than just finding space for the information and writing it there.

The operating system must also keep track of where it put the file, without this it would be unable to find it again. When a file gets deleted, this record is altered and the disk area containing the information is marked as free space. The information itself remains intact until some other information is written over it.

The effect is similar to rubbing out the name of a video tape – you know you can use that tape now, but the original film is still on there until you do it, and should you change your mind you can do your own ‘file recovery‘ by writing the name on the box again. Commercial file recovery programs do exactly the same trick with computer files.

File Recovery Programs

There is no shortage of file recovery software to help you out if you delete the wrong file. There are numerous commercial file recovery programs, DOS has its own ‘Undelete’ command, and Windows has the familiar Recycle Bin. Except for Recycle Bin, they all work on the same principle of searching the hard drive for files that have recently been marked for overwriting. More advanced ones will also tell you how much of the file is recoverable by checking how much has been written over.

The seemingly simple Recycle Bin has one advantage over any third party file recovery program: it doesn’t allow any overwriting of deleted files stored in there. This means that files from here are recovered in their entirety, and will function exactly as before once they are restored.

Obstacles to File Recovery

The biggest obstacle by far is time. The longer you wait, the higher the chance of a deleted file being written over, unless it is safely in the Recycle Bin. Once this has happened file recovery is still possible but it will take a lot more than a bit of commercial software to do it.

Operating systems are continuously creating files, every web page you visit does the same, and so does every application you open. With this in mind, the time to start your file recovery process is the instant that you realize you needed that file.

If you are extremely security conscious enough to be running encryption software this will also reduce your chances of file recovery, as the majority of file recovery programs need to read the file to know it is there. If the encryption utility doesn’t offer its own built-in undelete function then file recovery is going to be very difficult and very expensive.

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