Welcome to Hard Drive Recovery

 



Data Recovery For Macintosh Article

Data Recovery Formats

Data recovery is very important if your hard drive crashes and you lose your files or can't access your drive. There are a few different data recovery formats which can help you. These formats range from the simple - backing up your files, to the complex - using a data recovery specialist. Which one you select will depend upon your level of technical expertise and the cause of your hard drive failure.

The simplest way to recover your files is from a storage unit which you use for regular back ups of your hard drives. You can use another hard drive for this purpose or a zip disk. You can also burn the files onto a CD or DVD. The important thing is to back up your files regularly and often. It is best to store your files in a separate location to keep them safe. Then when something happens to your hard drive you will still have your important files. As long as you have those, you can simply buy a new hard drive and start from scratch which will be much cheaper for you than taking your computer to a specialist, especially if the cause is an accidentally deleted file.

You could also take your hard drive to a specialist who has been trained in restoring data. In fact, if you notice your files being corrupted and your hard drive making strange noises, you should take it to a specialist right away before serious damage is done and files are lost for good. If you continue to use your hard drive in this circumstance it is possible you will write over your 'lost' files and make it hard or impossible to retrieve them.

Of course if you don't want to use a specialist to fix your hard drive and restore your data, you can try and do it yourself. This can be done in some cases with data recovery software. You should make sure that you know what you are doing first because you could damage the drive even further if you don't. One program is called FIRE and it will check for a computer virus and then search your computer for information on what cause it to crash so it can restore your data.

Computers that use Linux can use a program called Linux Disc Editor which will find files on damaged drives. NT file recover is used on Windows and DOS computers. This program finds NTFS information on a hard drive and converts it into FAT format.

Software isn't likely able to help you if your computer is damaged in a flood or fire however. In that case, the drive itself will have to be rebuilt by a specialist.

So you can see that just because your hard drive crashes, it doesn't mean that your files are lost for good. The important thing is that no matter which data recovery format you choose, you act quickly so further damage does not occur.



Hard Drive Recovery Recommended Products

Hard Drive Recovery News and Information

 

Data Recovery For Macintosh News

Ten Things We Learned From Tech Earnings Season

The top 10 tidbits gleaned from earnings reports and conference calls.

Read more...


Apparatus Expands Deployment of Arkeia for Backup of Hosted Services

AUSTIN, Texas, July 20 /PRNewswire/ -- Arkeia Software, will demonstrate Arkeia Network Backup v8.2 at HostingCon 2010, in Booth #318. HostingCon 2010 is being held at the Austin Convention Center in Austin, Texas, July 19-21. Arkeia Software, a leading provider of fast, easy-to-use, and affordable network backup solutions, today announced the four-year anniversary of deployment by Apparatus ...

Read more...


U.S. Stocks Advance on Optimism About Earnings

Optimism about earnings from technology and energy companies overshadowed a drop in financial shares

Read more...


U.S. Stocks Fluctuate

Optimism about earnings and takeovers was tempered by a bigger-than-estimated drop in homebuilder sentiment

Read more...


U.S. Stocks Fluctuate as Homebuilders, Financial Shares Slump

U.S. stocks swung between gains and losses as weaker-than-estimated homebuilder confidence and declines in financial shares erased an early rally triggered by takeovers and higher-than-forecast earnings at Halliburton Co.

Read more...