Thursday, 6 October 2011

Unique Content Article on Microsoft PowerPoint,PowerPoint training courses,Microsoft Office,tutorial,training

Data Recovery: Do You Really Want To Go There?


by Daniel Wilkinson


There is a lot of mythology surrounding the idea of data recovery. People have to go through it when they delete some important files by accident off their hard drives. You'll probably also see forum posts from people wondering what to do about their lost data after a computer crash. There are plenty of so-called experts on data recovery that would answer them, somewhat annoyingly, with: "Did you make a back-up?" Nope. And now your only history paper has gone down the tubes.

The fact is, however, that in most cases concerning data recovery, that statement isn't exactly true. Unless the data has been physically overwritten, it has not completely disappeared. It doesn't matter whether it was deleted accidentally, went corrupt because of a virus, or a disk got formatted accidentally-data in a system is very clingy.

You can start by finding the name and number of some data recovery specialists. If you have access to a functional computer with an Internet connection, just run a search on data recovery specialists and try to find one in your area. Data recovery is big business, and there are data recovery specialists everywhere there are personal computers.

Data recovery programs are both reasonably-priced and easily installed on your PC. If you run an Internet search, you will even find some data recovery freeware programs which you can download at no cost to your PC. Free data recovery programs, however, may be limited in their scope; if so, you'll have to do some research to find one with all the features you require. Or, you can look for two or three of them and assemble a data recovery "toolkit."

The data recovery process isn't cheap, because it requires your hard drive to be worked on in a clean room, which has to be kept completely dust free. And the data recovery specialist has to use extremely precise instruments with meticulous care to salvage as much of your data as possible, so data recovery is a slow, tedious process.

Did you learn from this lesson? Let's now move along to another myth we should get rid of.




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