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4 answers

there is very very few programs wrote in dos, i use a program called getdataback thats for windows or i use spinwrite6 if u google for either of these, both are designed to run in a windows.

2007-01-10 05:12:11 · answer #1 · answered by Paultech 7 · 0 0

Deleted data is not really lost but is simply ignored by the operating system.
If the user deletes a file (hereby it is not meant shifting it into the Windows waste-paper basket), the first letter of a directory entry is provided with a special
character (it is E5 hexadecimal - i.e. 229 decimal). In addition, the information about the order of the clusters has been removed by the erasure however. That plays no role in this respect, if the file was not fragmented (i.e. all
clusters of the file were stored successively). With fragmented drives (this originates through frequent erasure and storing) the chances for recovering looks relatively badly.
however you can always search google & dwnload some free recovery software--i'd recommend a look @ www.download.com

2007-01-10 13:17:56 · answer #2 · answered by Avi1708 3 · 0 0

It depends on what you did afterwards.

When you delete a file (from Recycle BIN), actually just the blocks containing the file are released, together with the directory entry. If you did nothing else, the actual file data is still on the disk. There are programs (like the good old Norton Utilities which can read these deleted directory entries and can recreate the file. But if you did a lot of work, creating files, reading and writing, the file's blocks can be reused and the data is lost forever.

2007-01-10 13:11:46 · answer #3 · answered by blapath 6 · 0 0

try recovery tools such as active undelete,file rescue plus!, recover my files and a lot of more..

2007-01-10 13:09:55 · answer #4 · answered by frecoz 2 · 0 0

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