k*f
2 楼
rt
g8
4 楼
发包子?
d*r
9 楼
前后都试了,不行。其他盘没问题。
k*f
10 楼
G*D
11 楼
用低阶格式化试试
P*9
15 楼
放狗搜搜,有免费软件可以恢复文件. 我用过.
P*9
20 楼
看看这个免费的. DOWNSIDE: It won't recover your file name. The file name
will be like this "f12321323.jpg, f241343143.docx..."
Had a bit of trouble today: one of Vickie's two-gig thumb drives went
catatonic. All Windows could come up with was the scary message that the
disk in drive E wasn't formatted, and did she want to format it now? (Answer
try it on several machines, sacrifice a chicken--we came to the conclusion
that the thing's file system had broken.
So, armed with foggy memories of how Norton Utilities used to work, off I
went into the wilds of the Net, searching for recovery advice. Mostly I
found questionable stuff; there are many operators out there who will charge
you hundreds of dollars to take a crack at your data with no guarantees,
and there are plenty of freeware/shareware downloads that claim to recover
lost files but were last updated in 1997, and have since been turned into
those $49.95 bloatware packages you see at Office Depot. Most of these are
about hard drives or floppy disks, not memory sticks; I tried a half-dozen,
but got nothing back from Vickie's poor dead baby.
Finally I found Christophe Grenier's TestDisk/PhotoRec suite, at http://cgsecurity.org. PhotoRec ignores the file system in favor of finding lost files, so it works on FAT, NTFS, EXT2/EXT3, HFS, and (with certain caveats) ReiserFS. And since it's looking for known file headers and using data carving techniques, more than eighty file types--among them DOC, PDF, and PPT--are instantly recoverable. Here's how it went:
¦I downloaded the ZIP file, extracted it to my desktop--no
installation required, awesome!--and fired up PhotoRec. After smiling at the
text-only interface, I hit the down-arrow to highlight the drive--in my
case it was /dev/sdb--and hit Enter to continue.
¦Next I needed to choose the partition table type. Not knowing what
else to do, I chose Intel, since the last time the thing had run
successfully was on a Windows machine. (I'm guessing this would want to be
set to Macintosh if one was attempting recovery from a Mac-formatted iPod.)
¦The next screen showed an empty partition and a FAT16 partition,
both of which took up pretty much the entire disk. I crossed my fingers and
hit Enter again, choosing the empty partition.
¦Next, it asked me to choose my filesystem; I was pretty sure we
weren't looking at an EXT2/EXT3 system, so I hit Enter to accept Other, the
highlighted default.
¦Finally it asked for a location to store recovered data; I went
again with the default, which creates a new directory wherever you have the
program installed. And we were off and running; the first file to pop up was
a PDF, and since my new directory showed thumbnails by default, I could see
that everything was going to be okay. Four minutes later, we were all done;
all Vickie had to do was re-create her directory structure, re-name her
files, and figure out which belonged where.
will be like this "f12321323.jpg, f241343143.docx..."
Had a bit of trouble today: one of Vickie's two-gig thumb drives went
catatonic. All Windows could come up with was the scary message that the
disk in drive E wasn't formatted, and did she want to format it now? (Answer
try it on several machines, sacrifice a chicken--we came to the conclusion
that the thing's file system had broken.
So, armed with foggy memories of how Norton Utilities used to work, off I
went into the wilds of the Net, searching for recovery advice. Mostly I
found questionable stuff; there are many operators out there who will charge
you hundreds of dollars to take a crack at your data with no guarantees,
and there are plenty of freeware/shareware downloads that claim to recover
lost files but were last updated in 1997, and have since been turned into
those $49.95 bloatware packages you see at Office Depot. Most of these are
about hard drives or floppy disks, not memory sticks; I tried a half-dozen,
but got nothing back from Vickie's poor dead baby.
Finally I found Christophe Grenier's TestDisk/PhotoRec suite, at http://cgsecurity.org. PhotoRec ignores the file system in favor of finding lost files, so it works on FAT, NTFS, EXT2/EXT3, HFS, and (with certain caveats) ReiserFS. And since it's looking for known file headers and using data carving techniques, more than eighty file types--among them DOC, PDF, and PPT--are instantly recoverable. Here's how it went:
¦I downloaded the ZIP file, extracted it to my desktop--no
installation required, awesome!--and fired up PhotoRec. After smiling at the
text-only interface, I hit the down-arrow to highlight the drive--in my
case it was /dev/sdb--and hit Enter to continue.
¦Next I needed to choose the partition table type. Not knowing what
else to do, I chose Intel, since the last time the thing had run
successfully was on a Windows machine. (I'm guessing this would want to be
set to Macintosh if one was attempting recovery from a Mac-formatted iPod.)
¦The next screen showed an empty partition and a FAT16 partition,
both of which took up pretty much the entire disk. I crossed my fingers and
hit Enter again, choosing the empty partition.
¦Next, it asked me to choose my filesystem; I was pretty sure we
weren't looking at an EXT2/EXT3 system, so I hit Enter to accept Other, the
highlighted default.
¦Finally it asked for a location to store recovered data; I went
again with the default, which creates a new directory wherever you have the
program installed. And we were off and running; the first file to pop up was
a PDF, and since my new directory showed thumbnails by default, I could see
that everything was going to be okay. Four minutes later, we were all done;
all Vickie had to do was re-create her directory structure, re-name her
files, and figure out which belonged where.
d*r
21 楼
谢谢。PhotoRec可以但文件名不是原来的。r-studio还能恢复文件和文件夹名,电驴上
没有。
没有。
P*9
22 楼
给个包子吧
d*r
23 楼
屁哥和Patrick80159每人一个包子!
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