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17 answers

Nothing moves. When you save a file, it's recorded on the hard disk. There's another file on the hard disk that tells the Windows where everything is.

When you delete it, the "where it is" file is changed so you can only get to it when you go to the recycle bin.

When you empty the recycle bin, the part of the disk with your original file is shown as being available, but the file stays there until it is overwritten. It's still possible to get it back with a program like Norton Unerase.

If you want to be sure a file has gone, you need a program that cleans the unused parts of the disk like vaio soft drive eraser.

2006-10-25 05:43:21 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Windows never really deletes anything.

Delete a file and it goes to the recycle bin:

C:\System Volume Information\Recycler-. . .

After Recycler there is a load of crap which basically specifies which user put it there

Delete the file permanently [empty the recycle bin] and windows removes the file's info from the MFT [Master File Table]

That's on your hard drive in a sector which windows does not mount [you can't access it]

The file data remains on your hard drive it is not deleted. Basically this process allows windows to write over the part of the disk where the file was as if there was nothing there. [This is done because actually deleting the file would take up time and also it allows forensics and other investigative methods to recover files which you deleted]

In order to permanently delete something for real it needs to be masked. By writing full bytes over the file then writing zero bytes over the file. Then you can "delete" it.

Sleep tight don't let the Microsoft bugs byte! Lol!

2006-10-28 12:44:45 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

some years in the past while computers first all started starting to be common however the specs have been nowhere as great as they're right this moment and cupboard area became very minimum, human beings theory in the event that they deleted stuff it would unlock area. no longer so. shifting issues into the recycle bin is strictly that - shifting no longer fairly deleting. that's in easy terms moving from one folder, like My records, into yet another, the Recycle Bin, even nevertheless that's formed like a bin and not a classic yellow folder. So, the only thank you to sparkling up area is to thoroughly delete it by way of using Shift delete to bypass the recycle bin interior the 1st place or to often empty the recycle bin.

2016-12-08 21:03:08 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

They are still on your hard drive but the computer puts a mark in front of the item to tell the OP system that it can write over this space, that is why some programs can recover items one has deleted years ago because nothing was ever written over it.
Take care!

2006-10-25 05:40:48 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

they are still on the drive, but windows shows them as hidden.
That is why programs are able to undelete them, windows puts a character instead of the first letter, so it does not show up in any windows file. if you defrag or reformat that will usually delete it permanently under some circumstances it is still possible to retrieve some of the info. that is why it is better to strike the hard drive with a hammer to make it unbootable

2006-10-25 05:56:11 · answer #5 · answered by learnfromachild 3 · 0 0

They are in an area you can't find and will probably eventually be written over with new data. You can go to a professional and have it recovered before the data gets written over if you want to spend the money. I suppose amateurs could do it but you would need specific software I think.

2006-10-25 05:39:32 · answer #6 · answered by Marissa 6 · 1 0

The File Table entries are removed. Nothing actually happens to the file until that space of the disk is needed to write something new.

2006-10-25 05:38:21 · answer #7 · answered by Chris J 6 · 1 0

recycling is good ..we should all do this to windows x.p
put it in your recycle bin and pull the chain
oops your question ...well a jedi master would looking in your little sister file
oops see you friday nik

2006-10-25 05:42:16 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

They are not removed, the header link in the file structure is deleted, thats all

Most data, and most of the file handle, are still intact.

2006-10-25 05:45:09 · answer #9 · answered by Michael H 7 · 1 0

Cyber Space!

2006-10-25 05:40:45 · answer #10 · answered by english_rose10 3 · 0 1

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