|
Prev: How can raise a dead motherboard
Next: http://www.powersupplycables.com, cables for power supply to motherboard
From: kony on 4 Apr 2008 02:38 On Fri, 4 Apr 2008 11:07:59 +1100, "Rod Speed" <rod.speed.aaa(a)gmail.com> wrote: >> Another good reason not to put anything important >> on a Windows OS resident partition. > >I dont do that with the PVR files that do get deleted ocassionally in error and cant be recovered reliably. > Take the <DEL> key off the ole keyboard? Care to explain why you have trouble with that in particular? Undeleting a file that hasn't been overwritten is pretty routine.
From: harikeo on 4 Apr 2008 02:49 Sleepy wrote: > > > "Sjouke Burry" <burrynulnulfour(a)ppllaanneett.nnlll> wrote in message > news:47f54c3a$0$25482$ba620dc5(a)text.nova.planet.nl... >> Matt wrote: >>> Hello. I'm looking for a piece of software that would allow me to >>> recover files that have been recently deleted from my hard drive in >>> Windows XP. When I say deleted, I mean from the recycle bin as well. >>> >>> Kind Regards, >>> >>> Matthew Boulton >> I have used (google) pc inspector file recovery >> free, and it worked(another duplicate file wiper wiped >> a bit to well....) > > for files that have just been deleted 'pc inspector file recovery' > works fine but if the drive is going bad or you've lost the FAT table or > similar > then getdataback is needed and it about �60 I think and well worth the money imo. It saved me losing 400GB+ recently
From: Rod Speed on 4 Apr 2008 04:38 kony <spam(a)spam.com> wrote > Rod Speed <rod.speed.aaa(a)gmail.com> wrote >>> Another good reason not to put anything important >>> on a Windows OS resident partition. >> I dont do that with the PVR files that do get deleted ocassionally >> in error and cant be recovered reliably. > Take the <DEL> key off the ole keyboard? > Care to explain why you have trouble with that in particular? No thanks, I have to delete the files to make room for new recordings. > Undeleting a file that hasn't been overwritten is pretty routine. Wrong, as always, when its on an NTFS formatted partition.
From: Rob Nicholson on 4 Apr 2008 11:54 "Matt" <mattb95(a)hotmail.com> wrote in message news:fd480987-d7af-477b-ae08-2aa5a3b50ec4(a)s13g2000prd.googlegroups.com... > Hello. I'm looking for a piece of software that would allow me to > recover files that have been recently deleted from my hard drive in > Windows XP. When I say deleted, I mean from the recycle bin as well. I've used EasyRecovery Pro in the past to recover files deleted off pen drives. I've also used it to check how secure Eraser is in wiping a company hard disk before it was given away - Eraser did a very good job :-) Even the raw recovery mode in ERP couldn't get anything back. I've also run it, out of interest, on my PC's project hard disk and I was amazed what it managed to bring back from the mists of time. But make sure you a) freeze the hard disk NOW and b) don't install on the same partition as you are trying to recover from. If you have lost a serious amount of data, go out and buy another hard disk, install vanilla Windows XP and ERP on there, and then try to recover the damaged hard disk. Rob.
From: Sergey Wasilenkow on 4 Apr 2008 15:59 > Hello. I'm looking for a piece of software that would allow me torecoverfilesthat have been recentlydeletedfrom my hard drive in > Windows XP. When I saydeleted, I mean from the recycle bin as well. One of the best solution in the market is Easy File Undelete: http://www.munsoft.com/EasyFileUndelete/ It uses unique modern algorithms to recover files that other software either recovers incorrectly or is unable to detect.
First
|
Prev
|
Next
|
Last
Pages: 1 2 3 4 Prev: How can raise a dead motherboard Next: http://www.powersupplycables.com, cables for power supply to motherboard |