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HI folks
I am hoping someone can help me out here I recovered an excel file for a colleague from a hard drive that had died The problem is that one year's work has somehow disappeared Has anyone any ideas on how to resolve this? |
#2
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ups.com... HI folks I am hoping someone can help me out here I recovered an excel file for a colleague from a hard drive that had died The problem is that one year's work has somehow disappeared Has anyone any ideas on how to resolve this? When a file is deleted it isn't physically deleted and when file is saved it isn't necessarily over the original. Let me explain. The computer keeps a record of all the files on the hard disk. Think of it as an index. If you were to cross out a line in the index of a book the word or phrase will still be extant in the body of the book. (The difference with a computer is that the area of the 'lost' file is available for re-use). It is, therefore, possible to recover 'lost' files. As you will appreciate success depends on whether or not the area on the hard drive has been re-used. There are a number of software that will do the job. I have used and, therefore, can recommend 'Get data back' www.runtime.org. It is highly recommended that the software is installed on and run from another hard disk (to decrease the possibility of overwriting the 'lost' file). All this assumes that, at least, the hard disk will spin. It is possible to recover data from a hard disk that doesn't spin. This is, however, a specialist (forensic) operation and will be charged accordingly. It wouldn't do any harm to find someone local who could do this for you and assess and possibly justify the charge against the cost (time, patience and money) of re-entering the 'lost' data. Some work on the amount of data recovered so if you're looking only for one file the charge may not amount to much (comparatively speaking), You should, perhaps, also think of getting a backing up system. You may like to have a look at my web site www.1001solutions.co.uk for more information. Regards. Bill Ridgeway Computer Solutions |
#3
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Thanks for the reply Bill,
Unfortunately, the drive isn't spinning at all now. I really don't understand how the file I recovered (I slaved it onto another machine and accessed it from there) had lots information included in it Anyway... she has learned from this experience. On Jan 23, 3:57 pm, "Bill Ridgeway" wrote: wrote in oglegroups.com... HI folks I am hoping someone can help me out here I recovered an excel file for a colleague from a hard drive that had died The problem is that one year's work has somehow disappeared Has anyone any ideas on how to resolve this?When a file is deleted it isn't physically deleted and when file is saved it isn't necessarily over the original. Let me explain. The computer keeps a record of all the files on the hard disk. Think of it as an index. If you were to cross out a line in the index of a book the word or phrase will still be extant in the body of the book. (The difference with a computer is that the area of the 'lost' file is available for re-use). It is, therefore, possible to recover 'lost' files. As you will appreciate success depends on whether or not the area on the hard drive has been re-used. There are a number of software that will do the job. I have used and, therefore, can recommend 'Get data back'www.runtime.org. It is highly recommended that the software is installed on and run from another hard disk (to decrease the possibility of overwriting the 'lost' file). All this assumes that, at least, the hard disk will spin. It is possible to recover data from a hard disk that doesn't spin. This is, however, a specialist (forensic) operation and will be charged accordingly. It wouldn't do any harm to find someone local who could do this for you and assess and possibly justify the charge against the cost (time, patience and money) of re-entering the 'lost' data. Some work on the amount of data recovered so if you're looking only for one file the charge may not amount to much (comparatively speaking), You should, perhaps, also think of getting a backing up system. You may like to have a look at my web sitewww.1001solutions.co.ukfor more information. Regards. Bill Ridgeway Computer Solutions |
#4
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I don't understand the present situation. If you were able to connect the
hard disk to another computer and recovered a file(s) it must have been spinning. Are you saying that it has only now stopped spinning? If you have retrieved all the data you want from it the best thing would be to dispose of it (but be aware of the security implications of just dumping it). If you have not retrieved all the data you want from it you will need to refer it to a specialist as I suggested in a previous post. Regards. Bill Ridgeway Computer Solutions wrote in message oups.com... Thanks for the reply Bill, Unfortunately, the drive isn't spinning at all now. I really don't understand how the file I recovered (I slaved it onto another machine and accessed it from there) had lots information included in it Anyway... she has learned from this experience. On Jan 23, 3:57 pm, "Bill Ridgeway" wrote: wrote in oglegroups.com... HI folks I am hoping someone can help me out here I recovered an excel file for a colleague from a hard drive that had died The problem is that one year's work has somehow disappeared Has anyone any ideas on how to resolve this?When a file is deleted it isn't physically deleted and when file is saved it isn't necessarily over the original. Let me explain. The computer keeps a record of all the files on the hard disk. Think of it as an index. If you were to cross out a line in the index of a book the word or phrase will still be extant in the body of the book. (The difference with a computer is that the area of the 'lost' file is available for re-use). It is, therefore, possible to recover 'lost' files. As you will appreciate success depends on whether or not the area on the hard drive has been re-used. There are a number of software that will do the job. I have used and, therefore, can recommend 'Get data back'www.runtime.org. It is highly recommended that the software is installed on and run from another hard disk (to decrease the possibility of overwriting the 'lost' file). All this assumes that, at least, the hard disk will spin. It is possible to recover data from a hard disk that doesn't spin. This is, however, a specialist (forensic) operation and will be charged accordingly. It wouldn't do any harm to find someone local who could do this for you and assess and possibly justify the charge against the cost (time, patience and money) of re-entering the 'lost' data. Some work on the amount of data recovered so if you're looking only for one file the charge may not amount to much (comparatively speaking), You should, perhaps, also think of getting a backing up system. You may like to have a look at my web sitewww.1001solutions.co.ukfor more information. Regards. Bill Ridgeway Computer Solutions |
#5
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Has anyone any ideas on how to resolve this?
Recover the updated file from his daily/weekly backup? It's rather unlikely that "data corruption" would delete a year's data. Especially if the file was able to be recovered without rebuilding it (you don't say how you did it). It's far more likely that the recovered file was saved a year ago. In article . com, wrote: HI folks I am hoping someone can help me out here I recovered an excel file for a colleague from a hard drive that had died The problem is that one year's work has somehow disappeared Has anyone any ideas on how to resolve this? |
#6
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Thanks for the reply JE
I slaved the drive onto another machine and recovered the data from there, the drive is dead as the proverbial dodo now Unfortunately, the colleague in question didn't use network space provided for her so retrieval from backups is a non-starter. On Jan 23, 4:02 pm, JE McGimpsey wrote: Has anyone any ideas on how to resolve this?Recover the updated file from his daily/weekly backup? It's rather unlikely that "data corruption" would delete a year's data. Especially if the file was able to be recovered without rebuilding it (you don't say how you did it). It's far more likely that the recovered file was saved a year ago. In article . com, wrote: HI folks I am hoping someone can help me out here I recovered an excel file for a colleague from a hard drive that had died The problem is that one year's work has somehow disappeared Has anyone any ideas on how to resolve this?- Hide quoted text -- Show quoted text - |
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