* Disaster and Recuvary (sic)
Disaster and Recuvary (sic)
I spent the weekend up in Surrey seeing my youngest Grandson who is over briefly with his parents from Gran Canaria. Also got some great photos with them alongside Great Nan. Many other irreplaceable pics were downloaded to PC on our return to Cornwall when I realised that the empty folder I had just Shift Deleted wasn't empty! Everything I took over the weekend had been permanently deleted, or so I thought.
I stopped using the PC , switched on my Netbook went online to the WebUser forum and asked if they were irretrievable. Five minutes later I was told to download RECUVA to a USB stick. The download had 32bit and 64bit versions. Having plugged in the USB stick to my PC and run the application I found everything I had deleted and another 497 files deleted earlier. Ticking the files I wanted I hit the Recover button and retrieved them to a folder I created on another drive as they recommended.
Everything is now back where I want them and backed up!
RECUVA couldn't have been easier to use and it's free!
Dagwood [smile]
ID:6773
I stopped using the PC , switched on my Netbook went online to the WebUser forum and asked if they were irretrievable. Five minutes later I was told to download RECUVA to a USB stick. The download had 32bit and 64bit versions. Having plugged in the USB stick to my PC and run the application I found everything I had deleted and another 497 files deleted earlier. Ticking the files I wanted I hit the Recover button and retrieved them to a folder I created on another drive as they recommended.
Everything is now back where I want them and backed up!
RECUVA couldn't have been easier to use and it's free!
Dagwood [smile]
ID:6773
- Jane
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Disaster and Recuvary (sic)
Glad to hear you got them back, I have used that application before and it normally works well if you use it straight away.
Another useful tool is the Unstoppable copier which has recovered files from damaged and flaky hard drives and USB keys several times in the past for me in the past.
Another useful tool is the Unstoppable copier which has recovered files from damaged and flaky hard drives and USB keys several times in the past for me in the past.
Jane
My Family History : My Photography "Knowledge is knowing that a tomato is a fruit. Wisdom is not putting it in a fruit salad."
My Family History : My Photography "Knowledge is knowing that a tomato is a fruit. Wisdom is not putting it in a fruit salad."
Disaster and Recuvary (sic)
Useful to know Jane, thanks for that....I hope I never have to use it though! I wonder if that would be worth downloading now onto the same USB stick rather than worry about it when there is a disc problem?
Dagwood
Dagwood
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Disaster and Recuvary (sic)
Also remember that if you have windows 7 (& possibly with 8) you can right click on a folder and choose 'restore previous version'
- tatewise
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Disaster and Recuvary (sic)
That is a great feature of Windows 7 & 8, but only works if there has been a System Backup or System Restore Point created between loading and deleting the photos.
Mike Tate ~ researching the Tate and Scott family history ~ tatewise ancestry
Disaster and Recuvary (sic)
And that of course is something I hadn't even started to do!tatewise said:
That is a great feature of Windows 7 & 8, but only works if there has been a System Backup or System Restore Point created between loading and deleting the photos.
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Disaster and Recuvary (sic)
FYI: Automatic System Restore Points are created automatically by Windows every few days - you don't have to do anything - the last one on my PC was Tues 19 Feb.
Mike Tate ~ researching the Tate and Scott family history ~ tatewise ancestry
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Disaster and Recuvary (sic)
Sorry to correct you , Mike, but in Windows 8, the 'File History' facility is distinct from System Backup and needs to be turned on explicitly. Once it is, it works in the background.
Helen Wright
ColeValleyGirl's family history
ColeValleyGirl's family history
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Disaster and Recuvary (sic)
System Restore Points are designed to back up important system files to get the computer back up and running if it fails to boot or has other serious issues. In Windows 7 it doesn't by default back up data such as photos so wouldn't help in this particular case unless System Protection is turned on for the drive in question. If your data is on a different drive to the Windows system then it needs to be manually switched on. More here: http://windows.microsoft.com/en-GB/wind ... -questionstatewise said:
FYI: Automatic System Restore Points are created automatically by Windows every few days - you don't have to do anything - the last one on my PC was Tues 19 Feb.