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Throwing out old computer
Colin
You could delete the partitions and reformat, and Easy Recovery would still get the files back.. I have not yet tried it after writing zero's or a low level format, but I think that overwritten files are a little more than even ER can handle.. In the process of recovering a drive, I accidentally deleted a really old game that had been installed from a diskette way back when.. not noticing at first, I installed more programs onto the drive.. by the time that I realised what I had done, it appears that the new programs had overwritten the space that the game once occupied.. at that point, ERP just couldn't get the files back.. -- Mike Hall MVP - Windows Shell/user http://dts-l.org/goodpost.htm "Colin Barnhorst" wrote in message ... Actually, I am retrieving files from a twice-formatted hard drive right now. I am using OnTrack's EasyRecovery/DataRecovery in FormatRecovery mode. It gets almost everything back. Not bad for a $199.00 program. Including the Protected Storage (all the passwords). So maybe taking a sledgehammer to the sucka and burying it under a prickly pear cactus plant is not so outlandish an idea. -- Colin Barnhorst [MVP Windows - Virtual Machine] (Reply to the group only unless otherwise requested) "Ken Blake" wrote in message ... In , John John typed: I can assure you that with a 3 pass wipe no one will be able to retrieve anything from your drive unless they hire data recovery specialists and spend thousands of dollars, and even then they may recover nothing. I can further assure you that with a DOD or Gutmann wipe no one will be able to retrieve anything unless they spend tens of thousands of dollars and even then they may be left empty handed with empty pockets! Unless you work for the CIA or MI5 and have state secrets on your drive no one would bother spending that kind of money trying to retrieve anything that might turn out to be nothing more than emails to Grandma and a list of your favorite recipes, if they indeed can recover anything. Exactly right! Many people worry far too much about these things. For the vast majority of people, even simply formatting the drive is sufficient. Yes, it's possible to retrieve data after a format, but first you have to know how, and second, you have to want to. Unless there's something special about you and what you have on your drive, it's highly unlikely that some criminal will single out your thrown-away computer to search your drive for your darkest secrets. -- Ken Blake - Microsoft MVP Windows: Shell/User Please reply to the newsgroup |
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