The more I use Data Extractor, the more I start to like it. Although my DeepSpar Disk Imager has a lot more control over the imaging process, it is very rare that I'm able to read more than 100% of the drive.
PC3000 Data Extractor
Re: PC3000 Data Extractor
That task actually completed at 109%, if anyone cares.
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Re: PC3000 Data Extractor
Maybe PC-3000 has finally figured out how to recover data that's been overwritten, so it's actually getting back more than the drive's capacity.
Re: PC3000 Data Extractor
Maybe they're double-counting cross-linked files.
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Re: PC3000 Data Extractor
Maybe he has discovered the 4th dimension of data recovery?
Out of curiosity was the total size for the recovered data more than the size of the partition you were recovering?
I came across something like this the other day while recovering data from an old iPod using R-studio. I was able to recover 91 Gb of data from an 80 Gb hard drive. Turns out it recovered fragments of deleted files but reported them as being their original size.
Out of curiosity was the total size for the recovered data more than the size of the partition you were recovering?
I came across something like this the other day while recovering data from an old iPod using R-studio. I was able to recover 91 Gb of data from an 80 Gb hard drive. Turns out it recovered fragments of deleted files but reported them as being their original size.
Re: PC3000 Data Extractor
Cloning sector-by-sector is different than logical file recovery. With logical file recovery, you can find false positives, duplicate file records and incorrect file sizes. Meanwhile, with a sector-by-sector clone, you can copy no more than the maximum number of sectors. So, if there are 50 sectors on the source, you cannot mirror 51.fraser.corrance wrote:Maybe he has discovered the 4th dimension of data recovery?
Out of curiosity was the total size for the recovered data more than the size of the partition you were recovering?
I came across something like this the other day while recovering data from an old iPod using R-studio. I was able to recover 91 Gb of data from an 80 Gb hard drive. Turns out it recovered fragments of deleted files but reported them as being their original size.