Tried downloading some utilities from CNET which didnt see or recover
anything and then came across PC TOOLS FILE RECOVER which I
installed. Playing around with the settings, I got it to scan but at
the end of the scan process it crashes and sends a crash report to
Microsoft. Tried a few times and on each, it sees the three files and
a few others and then crashes before I can pause it or recover them.
So I switched computers and downloaded directly from the what I
thought was the manuf's site. That version didnt find any files at
all. So I went to the CNET site and downloaded it again and re-
installed, though curiously it didnt see the other installation??
Anyway now it cant see any lost files in the unallocated clusters on
the drive at all. Is there a way of getting this utility to receover
files properly or is there a better program for this please?
Anyone think this program would work any better in Fusion on a Mac for
any reason? Mac programs tend to cost lots of money while PC programs
like this tend to be free? I dont suppose I would mind paying some
small amount of money these programs seem to cost but am reluctant to
do this if the program wont see the files!
(I am using an appropirately updated AVG and dont think any of this is
caused by any virus)
Go alt.comp.freeware, search for "recovery". You should see a thread
dating 17-Jun-2009, subject "CF Recovery Software".
Recuva: http://www.recuva.com/
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If you hav edited the files a lot, they may be both fragmented, and
multiple copies on the chip. This can make recovery / reconstruction
hard but not impossible. Whate every you do, NEVER try and recover
the files onto the memory chip but only into a different drive.
The first approach I would take is to scan the chio to see how
many .DOC file starts are found, and investigate from there.
I asume the chip is FAT16 or similar.
Werte there other files on the chip as well as your important
documents
Michael
www.cnwrecovery.com
No, there were only basically these three smallish files, none larger
than 500kb on this FAT32 drive and I think I saw File Recover flash
past them before it crashed. Nothing was attempted to be recovered to
the drive yet and I am pretty sure that nothing else has been written
to the drive since the files disappeared. So I tried Recuva on my
MacBook Pro (on which none of the other recovery programs are
installed) and it started immediately, found everything immediately
and recovered everything I told it to immediately! It saved me about
a month of work and I am only sorry that my knowledge of google didnt
let me find that thread before! Thanks everyone, I thought that
there was something amiss here but all that was amiss was that I was
using some pretty wrong programs to recover the files.
(Now I suppose I had better scan the computer for a virus which
deletes documents from flash drives and presumably get rid of it.
There has to be a REASON these files mysteriously completely
disappeared)
http://www.cgsecurity.org/wiki/TestDisk
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Thanks, robots.
Thank you for that suggestion:
I didnt really know how to use the utility but I assumed it was a PC
type and chose FAT16 or 32: It showed both of them as having a bad
boot sector. It had earlier asked me for the boot type and I had said
none. Then it couldnt repair the boot sector, despite my thinking
that it didn't have a boot sector, being just a storage medium. So
whatever it thought it was, it couldnt repair it.
I wonder if I am using it wrongly or is there actually somcething
wrong with this USB drive which I was using to edit this file on
various computers, both Macs and PCs.
I was under the obviously mistaken impression that MIcrosoft Word kept
some type of back up of documents being used and edited. I am not now
sure how to make a back up of a document being edited on various
computers without becoming hopelessly confused. (I STILL dont really
comprehend what on earth caused all my document files to suddely
become deleted from this USB drive while retaining the, for example,
Portable Firefox directories and all their contents)
>> Maybe this:
>> http://www.cgsecurity.org/wiki/TestDisk
> Thank you for that suggestion:
> I didnt really know how to use the utility but I assumed it was a PC
> type and chose FAT16 or 32: It showed both of them as having a bad
> boot sector. It had earlier asked me for the boot type and I had said
> none. Then it couldnt repair the boot sector, despite my thinking
> that it didn't have a boot sector, being just a storage medium. So
> whatever it thought it was, it couldnt repair it.
> I wonder if I am using it wrongly or is there actually somcething
> wrong with this USB drive which I was using to edit this file on
> various computers, both Macs and PCs.
> I was under the obviously mistaken impression that MIcrosoft Word
> kept some type of back up of documents being used and edited.
It does. You can see it when the document is on a hard drive.
> I am not now sure how to make a back up of a document being
> edited on various computers without becoming hopelessly confused.
One obvious approach is to copy it to another
USB stick every time you do a significant edit.
> (I STILL dont really comprehend what on earth caused all my document
> files to suddely become deleted from this USB drive while retaining the,
> for example, Portable Firefox directories and all their contents)
Since you could recover them, most likely something screwed the directory structure.
> Thank you for that suggestion:
>
> I didnt really know how to use the utility but I assumed it was a PC
> type and chose FAT16 or 32:
I've never used it myself.
> I was under the obviously mistaken impression that MIcrosoft Word kept
> some type of back up of documents being used and edited. I am not now
> sure how to make a back up of a document being edited on various
> computers without becoming hopelessly confused.
Periodically save the document to a backup copy, such as
document.bak04.doc. Then save it back to the original document.doc to be
working on it again, or reopen it.
> (I STILL dont really
> comprehend what on earth caused all my document files to suddely
> become deleted from this USB drive while retaining the, for example,
> Portable Firefox directories and all their contents)
I've had bad things happen on my flash drive too. Still can't explain
them, but when doing any heavy maintenance I always unplug it first
because that's when it happened. Also, I always use the safely
disconnect icon and if it can't, I reboot. I have a boot menu that stops
everything and I take it out then.
--
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Thanks, robots.
The most common reason I have seen for losing files on a flash drive
is corruption of the boot sector, or FAT. Sometimes, a save will
write data over the FAT. Recovery is often possible, but only with
specialised data recovery software.
Michael
www.cnwrecovery.com
I always change to NTFS on my external drives as it is so much less
damageable, and so much faster doing groups of small files.
Caveat, I did have one file corrupt at 1st on a thumb drive, but that
may have been a program's fault. I buffered it up by using the Optimize
For Performance policy that enables write-buffering just in case. Hasn't
happened again, except in someone else's computer. chkdsk actually fixed
that.
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Ed Light
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Thanks, robots.
I will adopt your suggestions but I have to repeat, this boot sector
doesnt seem susceptible to repair for some odd reason. Luckily Recuva
continually does find all files. In 12.1 seconds to be precise!! This
is one amazing program??
> I will adopt your suggestions but I have to repeat, this boot sector
> doesnt seem susceptible to repair for some odd reason.
Best to delete the partition and make a new one.
--
Ed Light
Better World News TV Channel:
http://realnews.com
Bring the Troops Home:
http://bringthemhomenow.org
http://antiwar.com
Iraq Veterans Against the War:
http://ivaw.org
http://couragetoresist.org
Send spam to the FTC at
sp...@uce.gov
Thanks, robots.
> f you hav edited the files a lot, they may be both fragmented, and
> multiple copies on the chip. This can make recovery / reconstruction
> hard but not impossible. Whate every you do, NEVER try and recover
> the files onto the memory chip but only into a different drive.
And stronger, *do not write anything* to the drive from which you are
trying to recover data. Treat said drive as read-only, because anything
you write to the drive may overwrite what's on the drive.