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A Beginner Guide to Web Hosting
What is web hosting? Whenever you visit a website, what you see on your web browser is essentially just a web page that is downloaded from the web server onto your web browser. In general, a web site is made up of many web pages. And a web page is...
Are You Prepared For A Hard Drive Crash?
Its just a matter of time before you experience a hard drive
problem. Are you prepared to loose your data? If your hard drive
crashed right now do you have an action plan to follow? Most
people only think of backing up their data after they...
Computer Disposal - Throwing Away Your Computer, Money, and Idenity
You may reprint or publish this article free of charge as long as the bylines are included. Original URL (The Web version of the article) ------------ href="http://www.defendingthenet.com/Newsletters/Throwing...
Did You Ever Want to Completely Erase Everything on Your Computer?
Did you ever want to erase everything on your computer? This is a program I found that does that for you quickly and easily. Active@ KillDisk is a hard drive eraser and is powerful and compact DOS software that allows you to destroy all data on...
Nucleus Kernel for NTFS Data Recovery Softwares
Nucleus Technologies.com offers a complete range of data recovery software and utilities for Windows, operating system and supports various file systems including FAT16, FAT32, NTFS, NTFS5 Kernel for NTFS recovers data from deleted, formatted,...
Quick System Restore with ASR Backups
ASR (Automated System Recovery) is a feature available on the Windows XP Pro and Windows Server 2003 operating systems for quick and efficient system backup and restore. Typically, the restore process involves reinstalling the operating system and...
Top 10 Ways to Protect Yourself from Online Identity Theft
Identity theft is becoming a bigger problem as more and more people are making the internet a bigger part of their lives. People who are new to the online medium often fall prey to 'phishing' or other internet identity theft schemes. In many cases...
Using System Restore to save yourself from formatting your hard drive
It is the most annoying thing when one day you use your computer and nothing seems to work fine. Program freezes, files get corrupted or internet doesn’t work. You called the customer support or some friends you know who’s very much familiar with...
Webfarms II: Balancing The Load.
Okay, so you understand webfarms now. What's the magic that actually distributes the load, and how does it determine how the distribution is handled? At ORCS Web we use the Foundry Server Iron products to perform our webfarm load-balancing. If one...
Working from Home ... For Yourself or Someone Else?
Although many people badly want to work from home, not everyone wants to have to launch and run a fully-fledged business of their own in order to do so. For such people the desire to work from home is more about maximizing time to be with...
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Computer Data Recovery Options
Losing files on your computer can be a frightening experience if the files are of importance to you personally or professionally. Computer data recovery techniques include the most simple of operations, like simply retrieving an accidentally deleted file, to very complex file retrieval procedures that only professionals should attempt to do.
If you are trying to proceed with your hard disk recovery solution on your own, first start with the most obvious answer. Look in your recycle bin to see if the file has been placed there. If it is, you can choose the "restore" option, and your system will automatically put the file back on your computer where it was stored originally. Of course, if every retrieval was this simple, there would be no need for computer professionals who specialize in data recovery, so chances are you'll need to try a different technique to find your lost data.
If you've deleted a file on your computer, and you've emptied your recycle bin, don't despair. When a file is deleted on a computer, it's not erased immediately from the system. What actually happens
is the computer marks the deleted file as "deleted", and it is no longer in view to users within your computer's files. The file remains on the hard drive until new data is saved over it, similar to recording songs on cassette tapes. So, in order for computer data recovery to happen on files that have been deleted, you'll need to attempt to recover them before new data has been written over the file.
The best thing you can do to increase your chances of success is to immediately stop using the computer until you've retrieved the deleted file. The more you use your computer, the more information will be saved and the more likely the information could be saved over the file you are hoping to get back!
About the Author
******************************************* Brad Triggs provides more information on Data Recovery at his website: Data-Recovery-Central.com - Computer Data Recovery *******************************************
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