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Die Steve Jobs. You too Michael Dell. I am serious...
I really am.
So the story is this, but in case you want to find out the answer first, here is it: my lovely DELL XPS M1710 is without a HDD after a mechanical defection of it sent it directly to the repair man.
Continuing, die Apple and your software division. iTunes just erased my entire collection on my iPod because it couldnt find it on the computer, and because of this stupidity, I hit my computer (I know, i'm a big idiot...I admit :shame: ) but exactly over the HDD. It wasn't hit with great power, but based on what I heard from the repair guy I drew the following conclusion:
The HDD on a very expensive laptop had a mechanical problem and the hit triggered the failure. :shocked2: :no:
That has to be the stupidest thing ever in my life. And second, guess what? 80GB of data, including my Fall of Constantinople - almost completely edited - I added 10000 words and 15 pages!!! - ARE LOST FOREVER.
I'm speechless.
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Re: Die Steve Jobs. You too Michael Dell. I am serious...
Quote:
Die Steve Jobs. You too Michael Dell. I am serious...
-evil voice- Good, gooood. Let it flow through you, the anger. Summon your anger to increase your power, then destroy them. One swift stroke!
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Re: Die Steve Jobs. You too Michael Dell. I am serious...
Yup, unless you have a 3rd-party utility, the iPod will sync to whatever it thinks is on your PC. That's why backing data up on an iPod can be risky.
I'm sorry for your loss, edzy.
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Re: Die Steve Jobs. You too Michael Dell. I am serious...
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Re: Die Steve Jobs. You too Michael Dell. I am serious...
Quote:
Originally Posted by Gregoshi
edyz's post summarized:
I want to be a part of whatever mailing list you're on! :angry:
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Re: Die Steve Jobs. You too Michael Dell. I am serious...
Well, not everything is lost. I sent the disk to the service so they can save my data, hopefully. What are the chances of saving my data?
Gregoshi, i needed that pun. Especially when writing from a digital iPod keyboard!!
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Re: Die Steve Jobs. You too Michael Dell. I am serious...
If you're willing to pay the price -- and it can be high -- HDD recovery is very good. Expect to have all of your files back.
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Re: Die Steve Jobs. You too Michael Dell. I am serious...
An advice for the future: backups
Some modding communities are quite big on that but if you don't have tons of big files, maybe just back them up to some USB stick or so just in case, otherwise you can use DVDs for example.
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Re: Die Steve Jobs. You too Michael Dell. I am serious...
Quote:
Originally Posted by edyzmedieval
Well, not everything is lost. I sent the disk to the service so they can save my data, hopefully. What are the chances of saving my data?
Gregoshi, i needed that pun. Especially when writing from a digital iPod keyboard!!
HDD recovery is very expensive for mechanical failures.
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Re: Die Steve Jobs. You too Michael Dell. I am serious...
@Husar
Yeah, I took a step toward that by buying an external hard drive and an 8GB memory stick to store my small stuff like my book and my Flight Simulator logbook.
@Lemur and Evil Maniac
I'm really desperate. Never in my 10 year computer life I experienced mechanical failure of a component, never ever. Not even a problem with the power or something. NOTHING. So I think I will pay, because I want my data. It's not about like you can do it again and stuff. I can, but the massive amount spent on that book (yeah, I do believe I can do something with it) and more than 2 days spent on perfecting my Flight Simulator skills because I want to take my PPL...Even those things matter to me.
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Re: Die Steve Jobs. You too Michael Dell. I am serious...
Quote:
Originally Posted by edyzmedieval
@Lemur and Evil Maniac
I'm really desperate. Never in my 10 year computer life I experienced mechanical failure of a component, never ever. Not even a problem with the power or something. NOTHING. So I think I will pay, because I want my data. It's not about like you can do it again and stuff. I can, but the massive amount spent on that book (yeah, I do believe I can do something with it) and more than 2 days spent on perfecting my Flight Simulator skills because I want to take my PPL...Even those things matter to me.
My quoted bill was about seven hundred Euro, AND I tried to bargain down. It got me to about five hundred, and that was if I put my HD on last priority and chose the slowest shipping. Just thought you might want to know.
I can understand the book recovery, and if you've had the data on the HD for a long time. Mine was relatively new (a month or so, I just got one from a bad batch), so I could recreate most data within the next few weeks. It's obviously very different for you, and I hope you can get the money.
Remember, even if you pay, they won't always be able to recover everything. Usually they'll do the recovery, and if they don't get what you want, you don't pay. But some companies may work differently, so always read their policies.
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Re: Die Steve Jobs. You too Michael Dell. I am serious...
Oh my god...Seven hundred euros for data recovery!!! Yours was quite early, mine neared 5 months of work and creation. Plus, I have lots and lots of photos from home and other stuff related to home which are quite necessary when you are 2000kms away.
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Re: Die Steve Jobs. You too Michael Dell. I am serious...
Quote:
Originally Posted by edyzmedieval
Oh my god...Seven hundred euros for data recovery!!! Yours was quite early, mine neared 5 months of work and creation. Plus, I have lots and lots of photos from home and other stuff related to home which are quite necessary when you are 2000kms away.
Maybe you'll be able to find someone who can do it cheaper. It really comes down to what exactly is wrong, but for complete physical failure, it's going to be high.
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Re: Die Steve Jobs. You too Michael Dell. I am serious...
It was in the thousands a couple of years ago for mechanical recovery.
When we have finished with server HD's we pass a gauss wand over them and then throw them from the ground at about desk height. Impact is a pretty good way to destroy a HD. So you did the correct thing if you wish to wipe out your data. :cry:
Take it as an (expensive) learning experience and create backups in the future. Better still with the photo's burn them to disk or save them to a USB key. Check the data and then either send them back to your parents or keep them in a safety deposit box. Essentially all the unique data should have a backup and if it is really important keep it offsite.
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Re: Die Steve Jobs. You too Michael Dell. I am serious...
I did read somewhere a while ago (see here) that placing a dead hard drive in a freezer (in something to protect it from moisture) may allow it to work just long enough for you to extract the data. It won't work on failed heads though, only on dodgy bearings.
I've never tried it myself though, and those cheap DIY computer tricks aren't very reliable, and often conclude in making things worse than they already were.
Sorry about your data loss BTW ~:)
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Re: Die Steve Jobs. You too Michael Dell. I am serious...
Pape, have you ever tried putting one into a microwave oven?
Not that I have, I just think it could be fun. ~D
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Re: Die Steve Jobs. You too Michael Dell. I am serious...
Putting a heavily scratched DVD game disc in the freezer, put it in the drive, and it worked. :laugh4:
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Re: Die Steve Jobs. You too Michael Dell. I am serious...
Quote:
Originally Posted by Omanes Alexandrapolites
I did read somewhere a while ago (see
here) that placing a dead hard drive in a freezer (in something to protect it from moisture) may allow it to work just long enough for you to extract the data. It won't work on failed heads though, only on dodgy bearings.
I've never tried it myself though, and those cheap DIY computer tricks aren't very reliable, and often conclude in making things worse than they already were.
Sorry about your data loss BTW ~:)
You were probably reading about overheating drives such as the old IBM Deskstars there was a massive thread somewhere about those in which that bit of advice became infamous. For other types of failures the freezer method won't help. I've never heard of that method working for dodgy bearings either.
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Re: Die Steve Jobs. You too Michael Dell. I am serious...
Tomorrow I'll get some news about my data recovery, hopefully it's good.
Pape, I take it as a experience, a stingy experience. I hope from now on I don't have to face these problems again, or at least face them, but have my data safe.
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Re: Die Steve Jobs. You too Michael Dell. I am serious...
Professionals backup like crazy.
Computers break, there is a whole economy that comes from Information Technolgoy Support.
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Re: Die Steve Jobs. You too Michael Dell. I am serious...
Yeah, I backup all the time. Don't want the effort done go to waste.
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Re: Die Steve Jobs. You too Michael Dell. I am serious...
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Originally Posted by pevergreen
Putting a heavily scratched DVD game disc in the freezer, put it in the drive, and it worked. :laugh4:
I'm calling shenanigans here, that won't work at all for DVDs. It SOMETIMES works for HDDs, but rarely.
If you have a heavily scratched DVD, use some car polish and a non-linting rag, or one of those cd/dvd scratch remover tools. There are professional services that'll do this too.
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Re: Die Steve Jobs. You too Michael Dell. I am serious...
How often can external hard drives break down on me?
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Re: Die Steve Jobs. You too Michael Dell. I am serious...
Quote:
Originally Posted by edyzmedieval
How often can external hard drives break down on me?
Depends on the drive, really, but the chances of having an external and internal drive break down at the same time are almost nil.
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Re: Die Steve Jobs. You too Michael Dell. I am serious...
So, I got a report. They can't recover anything from my hard disk drive. I don't believe any word of it. So I'm sending it back home to some real specialists (I have real doubts that the school IT guys are specialists... I had some interesting experiences with them). Let's hope it works this time.
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Re: Die Steve Jobs. You too Michael Dell. I am serious...
Quote:
Originally Posted by edyzmedieval
So, I got a report. They can't recover anything from my hard disk drive. I don't believe any word of it. So I'm sending it back home to some real specialists (I have real doubts that the school IT guys are specialists... I had some interesting experiences with them). Let's hope it works this time.
Good luck - I think you're right in saying that the school IT guys wouldn't have any particular aptitude for data recovery, so with a bit of luck you can still get some stuff back...
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Re: Die Steve Jobs. You too Michael Dell. I am serious...
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Originally Posted by sapi
Good luck - I think you're right in saying that the school IT guys wouldn't have any particular aptitude for data recovery, so with a bit of luck you can still get some stuff back...
Yes, very true. Send it back to the company you got it from if they offer a data recovery service, like Seagate.
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Re: Die Steve Jobs. You too Michael Dell. I am serious...
For future reference, you can avoid iTunes auto-syncing altogether through options. I don't use iTunes because I hate the software (and the player) but it is certainly possible to prevent songs being added/removed without your permission.
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Re: Die Steve Jobs. You too Michael Dell. I am serious...
True. I think I have iTunes set to manual, which means it doesn't add or erase stuff on its own.
Also: backup! If there is anything at all of even the slightest value of your harddisk, make sure you have a backup solution. A second harddisk for backup (note: raid-1 is not a backup!) is a decent precaution against this kind of harddisk failure, but keep in mind that laptops can also be stolen, and then even the most expensive data recovery service won't save your data. In other words: make sure you also have a external backup.
How far you want to go is up to you: if you want protection against fires and meteor strikes, you need off-site backup. Preferably is a safe location in a diifferent city. (Note that this will only protect your data; your house is still gone.)
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Re: Die Steve Jobs. You too Michael Dell. I am serious...
Quote:
Originally Posted by edyzmedieval
So, I got a report. They can't recover anything from my hard disk drive. I don't believe any word of it. So I'm sending it back home to some real specialists (I have real doubts that the school IT guys are specialists... I had some interesting experiences with them). Let's hope it works this time.
Considering data recovery is a specialist field, I doubt a school IT guy is going to be qualified in that area. School IT guys are generally at the start of their career or worse as high as they ever get they are generally 1st level desktop techs. Data recovery is probably more equivalent to Tier 2 server/platform engineers.