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Disaster Planning ¡V How important is it to you!
I have been extracting Marketing Case Studies from Jim Aitchison¡¦s ¡§How Asia Advertises¡¨ for the past six issues. Frankly speaking, I am a bit sick of it. Having to extract articles from one source and post it onto the newsletters. Oh man, time...
E-commerce, A No Nonsense Perspective For New Business
Success is about making fewer mistakes - why you should read this Guide?
Whilst failure is one of the best ways we can learn, learning from others’ experience is far less painful - and that’s essentially the point of this guide! Learning from...
Easy Guide to RAID Recovery
What is RAID RECOVERY?
RAID stands for Redundant Array of Inexpensive Disks. It is a method of combining several hard drives into one unit. This method offers fault tolerance (the ability of a system to continue to perform functions even when...
Secure offsite backup services and software, online file backup and storage, remote online backup
Although you may not list it in on your IRS form, information is
your business' primary asset. From your customer database to
your financial records to your proprietary product information,
information is the key element to maintaining both...
Trouble-shooting Hard Drive Problems - Part 2
The following article is the second in a series that helps solve many of the common boot problems with hard drives. (To read the first in article in the series click here). The article explains how to reconstruct the Volume Boot Record and will...
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Options for Computer Data Recovery
Losing files on your computer can be a frightening experience if the files are of importance to you personally or professionally. Computer data recovery techniques include the most simple of operations, like simply retrieving an accidentally deleted file, to very complex file retrieval procedures that only professionals should attempt to do.
If you are trying to proceed with your hard disk recovery solution on your own, first start with the most obvious answer. Look in your recycle bin to see if the file has been placed there. If it is, you can choose the "restore" option, and your system will automatically put the file back on your computer where it was stored originally. Of course, if every retrieval was this simple, there would be no need for computer professionals who specialize in data recovery, so chances are you'll need to try a different technique to find your lost data.
If you've deleted a file on your computer, and you've emptied your recycle bin, don't despair. When a file is deleted on
Associated Websites
a computer, it's not erased immediately from the system. What actually happens is the computer marks the deleted file as "deleted", and it is no longer in view to users within your computer's files. The file remains on the hard drive until new data is saved over it, similar to recording songs on cassette tapes. So, in order for computer data recovery to happen on files that have been deleted, you'll need to attempt to recover them before new data has been written over the file.
The best thing you can do to increase your chances of success is to immediately stop using the computer until you've retrieved the deleted file. The more you use your computer, the more information will be saved and the more likely the information could be saved over the file you are hoping to get back!
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Brad Triggs provides more information on Data Recovery at his website: http://www.data-recovery-central.com
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