When you operate a start up, you may not have the budget to hire specialized personnel for all departments, like big companies do. IT and data recovery services are the ones which you can outsource without major problems. After all, computers don’t break every day, do they?
When we delete files from our computers, the information doesn’t disappear. It only becomes invisible for human eyes, but it is still present on the drive, until some other data overwrites it. This is how data recovery is possible, if we act fast and wise to get it recovered.
In case disk data appears to be corrupt or missing, it is crucial that you shut down immediately that computer and call the data recovery service specialists. They can assess the damage and give you advice on the next steps you need to do in order to see your data back again. If not, you risk a permanent loss.
The best way to find out if data recovery is still possible is to seek for data specialists advice. Data recovery companies can tell you how big your chances are to retrieve your information.
Generally speaking, many types of data retrieval are possible: NTFS, FAT, Novell data recovery, Macintosh data recovery, Linux data recovery or logical data error recovery. Each of them requires special software tools to get the job done. There are no success guarantees, but usually the success rate is pretty high.
Learn how to listen to your computer. It will tell you when the hard drive gets older and tends to fail in operation. The preliminary stage is the one of unusual sounds, cracks or bumps. When you hear such things, you should backup your drive and shut it down. Then call your computer service company to tell them what you heard.
RAID servers can also become faulty in operation and their data recovery is possible, provided that you don’t do it at home, and that you bring all the servers which form the RAID array to the service company. Such jobs need to be done in clean environments, with no dust.
Posted under Hard Disk Data Recovery
This post was written by Jason Donovan on February 12, 2009

