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Back in the days when everyone used Windows 98 on hard disks that used the primitive FAT file system, every software utility suite included an Undelete program. Now that virtually every Windows systems runs,, or on disks that use the advanced NTFS file system, undelete utilities are rare on the ground. That doesn't mean you'll never need one, especially if someone in your office or family neglects to make regular backups. The best I've found is DiskInternals NTFS Recovery, which has the most powerful and the easiest-to-use file recovery features I've ever seen. Compared to its freeware competitor, Recuva, it found and recovered a larger number of deleted files. Of course, if Recuva can restore the files you need to recover, then you don't need anything more, but for anyone who manages multiple machines, I think NTFS Recovery is worth having.
In addition to its undelete function, it also offers a unique set of advanced features, including the ability to create backup images of your disks and tricks that let you access a small section of your drive even when the rest of it is too damaged to read. Now that I've tested it, I'm going to install it on every system I use so it's there when I need it. Recovering Files with NTFS Recovery When you start NTFS Recovery it displays an Explorer-style list of the drives on your system, and offers to scan one of them for deleted files or folders.
Galactica game free. You can choose to scan either a disk partition (roughly the equivalent of a drive with a drive letter) or, in case your disk is seriously scrambled, an entire disk. When you tell it to start scanning, it takes its time reading the disk.
I use a 40GB partition for my data files, and it took the program about twenty minutes to scan it for deleted files. If you keep everything on a single partition, as in most store-bought systems, it will take a lot longer to scan your 500GB or larger drive. The program's interface looks so much like Windows Explorer that you can concentrate entirely on recovering your files, not on learning a new interface. When the scan of my drive was complete, the program displayed a list of file types such as 'Adobe Acrobat Document (pdf),' Microsoft Excel Worksheet (xlsx),' arranged like a list of folders.
When I clicked on an entry on the list of file types, it opened a 'virtual folder' an Explorer-type list of recoverable files that matched the file type I had selected, for example Excel Worksheets. The program assigned each recoverable file an arbitrary filename such as 00000011.xlsx, but displayed a the contents of the file in a preview window so that I could see whether it was the file I wanted. A separate search pane let me find deleted files by entering some text that I knew to be in the file. This was highly effective with text files, but the feature has a hidden gotcha: it only finds text in document files, not in Excel worksheets or other non-text documents. After I selected the files I wanted to preserve, the program offered to save them to any disk on my system or network, or burn them to an optical disk using the program's built-in burning software, or upload them to an FTP server (old-style FTP only; the program doesn't support any kind of Secure FTP).
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An option let me preserve the directory structure of the original disk when recovering files. Minor Caveats Powerful as it is, NTFS Recovery has some room for minor improvements. One source of frustration was the program's inability to preview PDF files as they would look in a PDF reader; instead, it displayed the raw code of the PDF file, and I often needed to scan a lot of that raw code before I could guess what the file actually contained. Some of the menus seem to be translated from another language, such as 'Search recourse subdirectories,' which seems to mean 'Search subdirectories recursively,' or, in other words, tell the program to search through all subdirectories below the chosen directory. These are minor glitches in an otherwise beautifully-designed utility. DiskInternals NTFS Recovery isn't a system-recovery utility like Paragon Hard Disk Manager, which you use when your system can't boot.