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View Full Version : Ontrack Data Recovery: Top 10 2005



Rinzwind
December 13th, 2005, 02:33 PM
10. PhD Almost an F -- A PhD candidate lost his entire dissertation when a bad power supply suddenly zapped his computer and damaged the USB Flash drive that stored the document. Had the data not been recovered, the student would not have graduated.

9. Suffering from Art -- While rearranging her home office, a woman accidentally dropped a five pound piece of clay pottery on her laptop, directly onto the hard drive area that contained a book she'd been working on for five years and 150 year-old genealogy pictures that had not yet been printed.

8. Domestic Dilemma -- A husband deleted all of his child's baby pictures when he accidentally hit the wrong button on his computer. His wife hinted at divorce if he did not get the pictures back.

7. Bite Worse than Bark -- A customer left his memory stick lying out and his dog mistook it for a chew toy. Ontrack was able to recover all of the data despite teeth marks all over the stick and a hole that went completely through.

6. Don't Try this at Home -- A man attempting to recover data from his computer on his own found the job too challenging mid-way through and ended up sending Ontrack his completely disassembled drive -- with each of its parts in a separate baggie.

5. Out of Time -- A clockmaker suffered a system meltdown, losing the digital designs for all of its clocks. Ontrack literally beat the clock recovering all their data just in time for an important international tradeshow.

4. Drilling for Data -- During a multi-drive RAID recovery, engineers discovered one drive belonging in the set was missing. The customer found the missing drive in a dumpster, but in compliance with company policy for disposing of old drives, it had a hole drilled through it.

3. Safe at Home -- After one of their executives experienced a laptop crash, the Minnesota Twins professional baseball team called on Ontrack to rescue crucial scouting information about their latest prospects. The team now relies on Ontrack for all data recoveries within its scouting and coaching ranks.

2. Hardware Problems -- A frustrated writer attacked her computer with a hammer. When the engineers received the computer, the hammer imprint was clearly visible on the top cover.

And finally, the number one most bizarre data disaster of 2005...

1. La Cucaracha -- In hopes of rescuing valuable company information, a customer pulled an old laptop out of a warehouse where it had been sitting unused for 10 years. When engineers opened the computer, it contained hundreds of husks of dead and decaying cockroaches.


My 1st laptop fell from 9 high onto concrete and I let it go. The harddisc didn't survive that :D

Now my question: what stupid things did you do with your computer?

keyshawn
December 24th, 2005, 05:03 PM
Hah, I had my first [and now only] regrettable backup ordeal last week.

What I did was: Using partition magic on my windows partition [HDA1], I created a new EXT2 partition (HDA5) to install breezy on. At the time, I had Breezy installed installed on my exisiting HDA7 partition, but I borked the installation [long story, read my threads for it] and I still had data on there I want to get [because I upgraded HDA7 from hoary].

So, I made the partition, installed breezy on HDA5, no probs. However, all of my data on HDA7 - is gone. Why ? I don't know. I thought I configured it so the breezy installer [on HDA5] wouldn't touch HDA7, but it wasn't the case. On my hda7 drive, there's an empty /home folder and an empty lost+found folder. the df command output said the drive was nearly empty, except for a few hundred KB's.

Now, I'm about 15 gb out of random stuff [music, videos, documents, wallpapers, etc]. Fortunately, I didn't lose too much important stuff [but a few high school papers I wrote and some edited images I made] but still, it was a lesson.

BACK UP YOUR STUFF FIRST, NO MATTER WHAT ! hehe. At least, I learned my lesson now, instead of a more important situation later on.
That even means, don't be cheap and use 'I don't have any CD-R's' as an excuse !

That reminds me, I probably should back up my iBook pretty soon.

regards,
keyshawn

PS - if anyone knows how I can recover the HDA7 drive, that would be appreciated !!