Wednesday, July 20, 2016

Don't Panic! How to Recover Data From a Dead Hard Drive

If the components in your drive are still functioning, you can recover the data yourself. If there's mechanical damage, send it to the pros. PM's complete guide to getting your files back.
 
 
Let's dispense with the I-told-you-sos. If you find yourself facing a data recovery job, then you have probably forgotten the cardinal rule of computing: All hard drives eventually fail. And you didn't back up your data, did you? We've been there—hey, everybody has to learn this lesson once. Now what?

Panic!

Just kidding. Actually, the first thing to do is determine if it really is a hard-drive failure you're confronting, and not one of the countless other equipment glitches that can cause a boot failure. If you have access to another computer, remove the failed hard drive from your sick PC, and hook it up as a secondary drive to the alternate computer. The easiest way to do this is through a USB universal drive adapter—it costs about $30 and is a good device to have around for all sorts of hard-drive diagnostics.

On a Mac, the process is a bit simpler. Use a FireWire cable to hook your nonworking Mac to a working Mac, then, "target boot" the nonworking machine by holding down the T key as you power it on. With either method, it's possible that your failed hard drive will show up on your healthy computer and reveal its files, in which case your hard drive is probably fine, but your operating system needs to be reinstalled. (Don't forget to offload your files before you do that.)
An attempt to salvage your data can cost anywhere from a hundred dollars to several thousand
If your files don't show up on the secondary computer, then you are at one of those pivotal moments in life when you find out how much your hard work and treasured memories are really worth to you. Depending on how your drive is damaged, an attempt to salvage your data can cost anywhere from a hundred dollars to several thousand. What's more, the process can take days—and there is no guarantee that the money and time you invest will produce any results whatsoever.

Now that we've gone through the depressing task of properly setting your expectations, here's the good news: Very often, the data on failed drives is recoverable. In fact, it's surprising how resilient that information can be—just ask any corporate embezzler who thought he had deleted all the evidence from his PC, only to have it show up later in court. The comparison is apt, since the very same computer forensic tools that uncover digital misdeeds are the ones that can find your treasured family photos.

There are two ways that drives crash: Logical failure and mechanical failure. In a logical failure, the drive's components are physically undamaged, but because of either accidental formatting or a corrupt file system, the drive is not able to find and navigate its own data. However, unless it has been overwritten, that data still exists on your drive.
There are two ways that drives crash: Logical failure and mechanical failure
A mechanical failure means that your drive has broken parts that are preventing it from working—busted drives often make a telltale clicking sound as they futilely attempt to access their files. If you hear that, your data may still be there, but you're not getting it back without calling in the experts (see "Worst-Case Scenario," next page). And those experts make good money. Data recovery services from Kroll Ontrack, Seagate's i365 and Iomega charge between $500 and $2500 to attempt to salvage data from either logical or mechanical disasters, depending on the severity of the situation. But if you are just dealing with a logical failure, you can get your files back on your own for far less.

We recently attempted a data recovery from the crashed drive of a Popular Mechanics colleague whose 120 GB MacBook drive had spontaneously given up the ghost. We removed the drive from her laptop, then used our USB drive adapter to hook it up to a desktop computer for diagnosis. We didn't hear any sounds that indicated a truly dead drive, so our first step was to download the free demo diagnostic tool at Prosoft Engineering to check what might be salvageable. Many companies offer demos that will scan your drive and give you a pretty good idea of what's recoverable before you lay down money to buy their software.

Once the assessment indicated we'd get good results, we used Prosoft's Data Rescue II software ($99), which is tailored for the Mac OS and Mac-formatted drives. There are far more options for PC owners, including Prosoft's Data Rescue PC ($99), as well as Ontrack EasyRecovery DataRecovery ($199) and RecoverMyFiles ($60) from GetData.
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Most of these products work in a similar way. Install the software, select the defective drive as your source and choose a destination folder to receive the data. (Make sure your recovery drive has enough space for the contents of your failed drive.) Then be prepared to wait, and wait. A full scan and recovery of our 120 GB drive took four days, and a larger drive could take longer.
Recovering a hard drive is a bit like getting back a stolen car
Recovering a hard drive is a bit like getting back a stolen car—you'll be happy to have your files back, but the results could be messy. No data recovery program will return your files to you in exactly the condition you originally kept them. These programs are designed to essentially do a data dump from your problem drive to a new drive. Files will be organized by type (JPEG images will be in one folder, Word documents in some other folder, MPEG movies in another) and your songs and photos will be mixed with random sound and image files from your computer's system folder.

Additionally, the names of all your files will have been changed to various alphanumeric sequences, such as IMG1039.jpg or MOV2010.mov. So be prepared to settle in for a long weekend of sifting through and renaming your files. Oh, and while you're at it, now's a good time to buy that backup drive.

Drive Disasters: Worst-Case Scenario

What if your hard drive is suffering from something a bit worse than your everyday hard-drive crash? How much damage can your data take before it's gone forever? We wanted to find out what could be salvaged from a computer that had been through a natural disaster, so we simulated a really bad one. We decided upon an earthquake/flood doomsday scenario. First, we took two laptop drives, loaded them with test movie and music files, then beat the heck out of them until we heard the signature clicking of mechanical hard-drive failure. Then we submerged one of the drives in custom- made storm-surge floodwaters (salt water, construction debris, oil) and let it soak for four days.

We sent both hard drives to Kroll Ontrack Data Recovery, which sells data-rescue services to both corporate clients and consumers. Ontrack's Jeff Pederson analyzed the drives in the company's clean room and found that the read/write heads in our dry drive were bent from our abuse and that we had scratched the platters. Our flooded drive was wet, but the platters were undamaged. Pederson replaced the heads and performed a recovery.

The results? Pederson was able to save 99 percent of the data from the dry drive and 100 percent from the flooded drive. Had we been paying customers, the service would have cost us $1200 each.

Source : http://www.popularmechanics.com/technology/gadgets/how-to/a3086/hard-drive-recovery/

Tuesday, May 24, 2016

Why Is It Not Possible To Easily Recover Data On A Hard Drive That Is Overwritten?

Why Is It Not Possible To Easily Recover Data On A Hard Drive That Is Overwritten?

Many people may think that data are missing and a professional can still perform Raid data recovery or hard disk recovery. In reality, the data has not been removed. A computer hard drive does not know how to locate the data. The information, which tells your computer where to locate the data, is missing. This is also the reason why the best professionals who perform laptop data recovery or hard disk data recovery cannot locate important files after a drive has been reformatted. How do professionals find information to perform hard disk data recovery if you have not reformatted a drive and had it overwritten? These hard disk drives store information magnetically and do not require anyone monitoring the information on the drive. Those strings of data in eight 1's and 0's may look like gibberish, but a hard drive can use those 1's and 0's to keep stored data separate.

Hard drives use magnetism to store Information
Similar to a car battery, hard drives have magnets that have a plus and minus pole. The poles represent the binary code 1 and 0 is a computer uses. The hard disk storage unit or platter contains a ferromagnetic surface and divides the binary codes into magnetic regions, called magnetic domains. Data is stored by the direction of the magnetism of these domains. The magnetic domains are magnetised in one of two directions and represent a 1 or 0. Data is stored in two ways on a hard disk unit. Before 2005, this data was recorded parallel to the disk surface, meaning the binary code was either recorded with left or right magnetism. This type of recording was called longitudinal recording. Around 2005 and later, this magnetism used to record binary code has been used to record segments being recorded vertically and perpendicular; it is called perpendicular recording. It adds a layer to the recording process and the magnetic domains are stored closer together.

Why your computer cannot find your file and what happens when data is overwritten
You cannot find your file and sometimes, you take your computer into a professional who is skilled in laptop data recovery or hard disk recovery and they cannot find your files either. If your data has been overwritten, the best professional in the world, even if they are good at Raid data recovery, cannot help you. Your computer may not find data because it has written over the stored data. The files are located using a table on your computer and rather than delete the information in the file, your computer marks the space where the file is as vacant. By doing this, it is able to write over the existing data and this is why the best Raid data recovery specialist or hard disk recovery professional cannot retrieve your files. The operating system writes over old data with new data, essentially deleting it.

Laptop data recovery is a long shot after data is overwritten
 Your information may be recoverable if it has been overwritten. If data has been overwritten, the magnetic domains are changed through re-magnetization. The process is not reversible and it is slim recovering data because it would require the use of a magnetic force microscope.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/expert/Jake_Orton/1925285

 -hard disk drive data recovery-

Tuesday, January 19, 2016

How to Recover All Your Data: A Few Efficient Approaches

How to Recover All Your Data: A Few Efficient Approaches

How can you efficiently recover all your data when your desktop, laptop or tablet crashes or loses some of the data? Furthermore, databases, which are collections of interrelated data, are used rampantly by all organizations involved such as, hospitals, banks, travel agencies, hotels, shopping complexes and you name it! So what do you do when these databases with huge collections of important data suddenly get sabotaged? This article touches on these aspects, and gives you tips on data recoveries. So why don't you read on?

First of all, let's talk about your laptop, desktop or tablet that you use on a daily basis. The best ways to recover all the data on these machines when they crash without warning or say, lose part of the data due to some error happening is to keep a backup of all your data in flash drives which have a good many GB's of storage in varieties. Find out and then decide how many GB's of data from your machine and/or together with storage from other sources you need and then purchase that flash drive within that capacity or more and keep a backup of all your important data. You need to update your backup weekly preferably, if not daily. This will enable you to recover all your data on your computer by using the backups.

Let's say you have a huge collection of audio, photos, files in different formats and they are continually growing on your computer and you want to backup all of your data from Day 1 until today and also, you are not being able to keep all your data intact on your computer. In fact, you are dealing with terabytes (TB) of data and that means you need to backup all your data all along and also remove some of the old data from your computer to make some space for new ones. The best way to maintain data in this case is to use an external portable hard drive and backup everything in it. This kind of external hard drive can store several TB's of data and you get to choose which size is right for you.

If you do not deal with GB's and TB's of data but still need to backup your computer's data you can use rewritable CD-ROM disks which will be able to store a good many megabytes (MB's) of data. I guess you get the idea.

Now let us consider recovery approaches for databases used by organizations as I mentioned earlier.

Periodically, the entire database is copied (backed up), typically to tapes, compact disks, or external portable hard drives (which I described earlier). Backups also can be made incrementally i.e. only the changes since the last backup are stored. A log file is used to record the changes in the database at each update, typically the old and new values of the updated attribute(s).

When an error occurs:

If the database itself is damaged (media failure, e.g. by a head crash)
- The last backup is loaded

- The updates of all committed (completed) transactions that were executed since the time of last backup are shown by the log. Those transactions that had not committed yet need to be restarted.

If the database itself is not damaged, but the correctness of the contents cannot be guaranteed (e.g. because a program with updates crashed)
- The log is used for repeating committed changes (redo) and reversing non-committed changes (undo). Then, the non-committed transactions can be restarted.

Summing up, it always boils down to the fact that whether you are concerned with your computer's data or a database's data, you will need backups, plain and simple.

Rosina S Khan wrote this article in order to provide information on recovery approaches for data on your PC's and laptops and/or any organization's important data in large databases.


Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/9234896
- hard disk drive data recovery -

Don't Panic! How to Recover Data From a Dead Hard Drive

If the components in your drive are still functioning, you can recover the data yourself. If there's mechanical damage, send it to the ...