Friday, October 8th, 2010 at
2:55 am
My husband has a 200GB "WD" hard-rive where he keeps all of his photos. He uploaded about 400 images last night & every 3rd one won’t show. When he tries to open the files he gets an error message that says the file is truncated & can’t be opened. He has a Macbook Pro & always uploads his photos into Bridge/Photoshop. He tried opening them in other programs but gets the same type of messages. He’s gone into other folders of his other work/photographs & several are giving him error messages now & also won’t let him edit any of the images.
We’re sure its not his camera, especially since it shows every 3rd photo is damaged. He deleted all the photos off his camera already when he uploaded the pic’s last night (as he always does) & he’s tried shutting down the programs & the computer several times, nothings changed.
HELP, he can’t lose this many files. He’s a professional photographer & needs all his photos. He kept the "bad" files just in case someone can help us recover them some how. Any body???
HELP!!!
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Sunday, September 5th, 2010 at
2:55 pm
I had multiple Word-files open in Microsoft Office 2008 on a Mac, and I closed them individually. I saved the ones I needed, and for the last one that I didn’t need I chose "don’t save".
Now it turns out that I really needed the one I didn’t save! It still exists, only in the "old" version – before I worked on it.
Is there any way to restore the changes I made to it?
Thursday, September 2nd, 2010 at
2:05 pm
I recently deleted some images from my computer by mistake. I recovered them soon after using data rescue 3. The problem is, they are so small. Is there anyway to restore them to original size and quality? (maybe using software, photoshop etc.)
I should have mentioned that I’m running Mac OS X
Firstly, thanks…. but
Like I said, I’ve already recovered them with a file recovery system that I bought and they were small. What difference should a different (not to mention cheaper) program work any different?
Do data deletion programs that focus solely on photos work better than a universal "all deleted file" recovery program? (In terms of restoring original condition.)
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