R-Studio is a comprehensive data recovery and undelete program renowned for its ability to recover mission-critical data lost to viruses, malicious attacks, and hardware failures or operating system crashes. It supports FAT/NTFS (Windows), UFS1/UFS2 (Unix), Ext2FS/3FS(Linux) file systems and functions on local and network disks, even if partitions are formatted, damaged or deleted. New additional file recovery algorithm increases the quality of file recovery and recovers files not recognized in file system metadata. Dynamic disk and RAID are supported as well as recovering encrypted files, compressed files and alternative data streams. Files and file systems structures (NTFS and FAT boot sectors, MFT file record, MBR, LDM structures, etc) can be viewed and edited in the professional disk hex editor. Extended Viewer Plugin allows viewing a content of the found files to estimate recovery chances prior to purchasing. Flexible parameter settings give you absolute control over data recovery
Version 3.8 includes an advanced hexadecimal editor to inspect and edit files and file systems structures (NTFS and FAT boot sectors, MFT file record, MBR, LDM structures). Using XML-based language (described in the software Help and Manual), R-Studio users can create own templates to parse files and file systems. The disk editor is particularly helpful for specialists in low-level data processing, IT security, data recovery and computer forensics.
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Recover your lost files ......... R-Studio Data Recovery
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- Ultimate Contributor
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- Just Born
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- Joined: Dec 10, 2013
Your best bet if you can is to take a clone image and run data recovery software if needed on the clone. The Linux ddrescue command is good for making a clone of a failing drive.
A data recovery service would use a hardware imager for this job. If the data is valuable that's the way to go. Also know the more you work on the drive the more likely it is to fail completely.
A data recovery service would use a hardware imager for this job. If the data is valuable that's the way to go. Also know the more you work on the drive the more likely it is to fail completely.
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- Just Born
- Posts: 1
- Joined: Jan 27, 2014
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- Just Born
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- Joined: Jan 21, 2015