Users Guide
3 TROUBLESHOOTING
Recovery Tips
DO NOT WRITE ANYTHING ONTO THE DRIVE CONTAINING YOUR
IMPORTANT DATA THAT YOU HAVE JUST DELETED ACCIDENTALLY!
Even data recovery software installation could spoil your sensitive data. If
the data is really important to you, and you do not have another logical drive
to install software to, take whole hard drive out of the computer and plug into
another computer where data recovery software has been already installed.
DO NOT SAVE ONTO THE SAME DRIVE DATA THAT YOU FOUND AND
TRYING TO RECOVER!
While saving recovered data onto the same drive where sensitive data was
located, you can intrude in the process of recovering by overwriting table
records for this and other deleted entries. It is better to save data onto
another logical, removable, network or floppy drive.
CREATE DISK IMAGE IF YOU HAVE EXTRA HARD DRIVE, OR OTHER
LOGICAL DRIVES ARE BIG ENOUGH!
Disk Image is a mirror of your logical drive that is stored in one file. This
can be useful when you want to backup the contents of the whole drive, and
restore it or work with it later. Before you start recovering the deleted
files, it may be a good idea to create a Disk Image for this drive, if you have
enough space at another drive. If you do something wrong while recovering the
files (for example, recovering them onto the same drive could destroy their
contents), you will be able to recover these deleted files and folders from the
Disk Image that you have wisely created.
Back to Contents
|