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May 7th, 2001, 07:00 AM
#1
Thread Starter
PowerPoster
HELP!! I lost everything!
How do i recover data from a drive that was formatted? I didn't have any backup software on there or anything . Is there any way? Nothing has been written to the drive yet i don't think...
PLEASE!!
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May 7th, 2001, 07:05 AM
#2
Addicted Member
Re: HELP!! I lost everything!
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May 7th, 2001, 07:13 AM
#3
Thread Starter
PowerPoster
I didn't see the demo on their website.
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May 7th, 2001, 07:15 AM
#4
Addicted Member
Well... the last time I used it.. it was a demo... that was about 10 months ago...
Originally posted by sail3005
I didn't see the demo on their website.
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May 7th, 2001, 08:00 AM
#5
Thread Starter
PowerPoster
Any other ideas? Anyone?
BTW, thanks for helping cyberwarpy. i wish i could find that program, because it sounds like it might do the trick!
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May 7th, 2001, 08:32 AM
#6
as far as I know you cant recover from a formatted disk. Everything is gone.
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May 7th, 2001, 08:40 AM
#7
PowerPoster
I think Cander is right. Formatting is the process of erasing anything already on disk and preparing it for use again. There are these deletion-recovery apps but they only work because the data is still there, allbeit unaccessable using normal methods. Formatting erases data and FAT.
Moral of the story: Make backups and don't format drives you aren't meant to.
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May 7th, 2001, 08:50 AM
#8
transcendental analytic
i remember there was an unformat app back in the msdos days.
Use  
writing software in C++ is like driving rivets into steel beam with a toothpick.
writing haskell makes your life easier:
reverse (p (6*9)) where p x|x==0=""|True=chr (48+z): p y where (y,z)=divMod x 13
To throw away OOP for low level languages is myopia, to keep OOP is hyperopia. To throw away OOP for a high level language is insight.
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May 7th, 2001, 08:52 AM
#9
transcendental analytic
in fact i just found unformat.com on my hdd in c:\dos\
Use  
writing software in C++ is like driving rivets into steel beam with a toothpick.
writing haskell makes your life easier:
reverse (p (6*9)) where p x|x==0=""|True=chr (48+z): p y where (y,z)=divMod x 13
To throw away OOP for low level languages is myopia, to keep OOP is hyperopia. To throw away OOP for a high level language is insight.
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May 7th, 2001, 09:06 AM
#10
Thread Starter
PowerPoster
I got an app called recover 98, it allows me to view all the files that were on the drive before the format. It is a demo, and will only let me recover one or two. I know it is possible to get my data back, any other programs? The demo is $160 to register, i woud rather loose all the data.
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May 7th, 2001, 10:36 AM
#11
Fanatic Member
when you format your computer the information that was on your hard drive is still there, it is only once you write something to the dirve does it actuall go, unless of course you do a full format, you will notice that this takes longer this is because it writes data to your drive then deletes as well as formats it, i am not sure what the data is but i think it is just random gumpf
just by 2 cents worth
Some people have told me they don't think a fat penguin really embodies the grace of Linux, which just tells me they have never seen a angry penguin charging at them in excess of 100mph. They'd be a lot more careful about what they say if they had.
-- Linus Torvalds
[ Galahtech.com] | [ My Site] | [ Fishsponge] | [ UnixForum.co.uk]
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May 7th, 2001, 11:57 AM
#12
wrong. if you did just a format then you can get it back. if you fdisked it then you are out of luck (that is what I've read anyway). fdisk takes away the table of contents and writes a new one. so basically it writes over the old one and destroys the original TOC.
How do you think the government gets information from HDD if the person formats it and then writes over it. the gov't has people that have programs that can go 7-10 layers deep to get info on HDD so it doesn't matter if it was formatted or not.
originally posted be zmerlinz
it is only once you write something to the dirve does it actuall go, unless of course you do a full format
I have never heard of a format that is partial then it is full. a format is a format doesn't matter how you run it.
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May 7th, 2001, 12:06 PM
#13
Frenzied Member
Those really smart data recovery systems can tell, from minute variations in the intensity of the magnetic field, what value each bit had before the data was changed. It's quite funky.
I'm with scoutt on this one. I'm pretty sure you can recover your data if you get the right program. If that 'Recover 98' program needs a serial number for registration, you can probably find one if you look hard enough.
Harry.
"From one thing, know ten thousand things."
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May 7th, 2001, 01:00 PM
#14
Fanatic Member
Originally posted by scoutt
I have never heard of a format that is partial then it is full. a format is a format doesn't matter how you run it.
fair enough i don't mind being corrected but with floppy disks how come you have a quick format and a full format ???
Some people have told me they don't think a fat penguin really embodies the grace of Linux, which just tells me they have never seen a angry penguin charging at them in excess of 100mph. They'd be a lot more careful about what they say if they had.
-- Linus Torvalds
[ Galahtech.com] | [ My Site] | [ Fishsponge] | [ UnixForum.co.uk]
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May 7th, 2001, 01:10 PM
#15
floppies are a different bread than HDD. the quick format just erases the TOC and then the full format erases the whole floppy. I don't think (I might be corrected on this but) you can't do that to the HDD, unless you fdisk it and then it won't work anyway. the files are still there but the TOC is gone. floppies don't use the fat32 or 16, they use a fat12 I think. so the TOC is different. didn't mean to be rude but it just sounded funny
Scoutt
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May 7th, 2001, 01:18 PM
#16
Fanatic Member
Some people have told me they don't think a fat penguin really embodies the grace of Linux, which just tells me they have never seen a angry penguin charging at them in excess of 100mph. They'd be a lot more careful about what they say if they had.
-- Linus Torvalds
[ Galahtech.com] | [ My Site] | [ Fishsponge] | [ UnixForum.co.uk]
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May 7th, 2001, 01:27 PM
#17
Hyperactive Member
A "Full Format" on a hard drive is called an unconditional format. i.e. format/u. If you do an unconditional format on a hdd then the data is irrecoverable.
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May 7th, 2001, 01:35 PM
#18
right you can, but it can't be the primary drive. Windows does something different, I don't know if it actually does fdisk it in windows or something totally different. but as far as I know you can't do it in dos. it is either fdisk or format.
Scoutt
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May 7th, 2001, 01:39 PM
#19
orignally posted by martinzg
A "Full Format" on a hard drive is called an unconditional format. i.e. format/u. If you do an unconditional format on a hdd then the data is irrecoverable.
that is what I was trying to remeber. you got your post in before I did so thanks 
Scoutt
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