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Beware
Do-it-Yourself Solutions and Products |
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Do-It-Yourself data
recovery software may complicate your problems and diminish the prospects of
a successful recovery. The object of many fix/doctor/repair programs is to try to make the
drive, file-system or volume usable - not to recover existing data. Do not run any program or utility that
writes to the affected media or changes it in any way, if you need your data
back. The programs that do recover
data are limited to addressing assumed scenarios, not necessarily your data
loss situation with its unique aspects.
In contrast, ActionFront technicians have knowledgeable colleagues
with 13 years of expertise to call upon, as well as proprietary software, a
full range of legacy and leading edge hardware and clean rooms available. Approximately 70% of single hard drive cases sent to ActionFront
have some form of physical problem; hence the foundation of the ActionFront
recovery process is making a “mirror” or copy of the media in question and
performing all subsequent recovery activities on the mirrored copy. As the media in question may completely
fail under repeated use, using this process increases the chances for a
complete recovery and preserves the original media in case further access is
required. Remember, there is no
software that can overcome hardware failure. Free Advice May Prove Costly! There are numerous
Internet sites offering advice about data recovery and unfortunately, the
advice is often just plain wrong! Much
of the advice pertains to configuration and installation issues, missing the
point that most data loss situations involve the sudden inability to access
data involving a previously functioning computer system or backup or the
accidental erasure of data or over-writing of data control structures. Installation advice is irrelevant or
harmful in these cases. Other typical
errors include: Ř
No warning about handling and ESD issues. Ř
No guidance regarding what sort of noises are acceptable versus noises that indicate device
failure. Drives that make ‘obvious
mechanical fault noises’ should not be repeatedly powered on and tested: it
just makes them worse. Ř
Advice to physically manipulate a problem
drive such as “twisting it quickly”. Ř
Misleading information about Windows utilities and
partitions. The first, basic
question of dealing with any media problem is "What would happen if I
lost access to the data forever?“ While following
free advice may resolve the situation, it may severely compound the
problem. Can you afford to take that
risk? |
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1(800) 563-1167 |
Data Emergency Guide |
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