<div class="IPBDescription">plaezee!!</div> does any one know a free file recover program taht i can use to get my map back please jesus. i have been looiing for like 2 hours
Did you delete the map itself, it did you have a harddrive failure? You'll need different tools depending on the situation - you didn't really give us much to work with. <!--emo&???--><img src='http://www.unknownworlds.com/forums/html/emoticons/confused.gif' border='0' style='vertical-align:middle' alt='confused.gif'><!--endemo-->
deleated all of hl becasue it was too big recyclin bin and all teh software shows me the rmfs are gone but i may be able to get the map. but i dont really want to pay 70 dollars for a file that may not work
never mind i bought one ( undelete) and it works now to fromat and redownload 8 gigs of muic 12 of movies 20 of games and then mebe some anti virus sofware , actually thats already going:)
Alright, heres a cheaper way. First, open the FAT32 table and find where your file was located on the hard disk. Next, remove your hard drive. Undo the screws on it. You should se lot of disk layers. Get a magnifying glass. There should be lots of 1 and 0s. Count up to where your file was. Copy the 1's and 0's on some paper. Put your list into notepad and save it as .rmf
There ya go!
Actually, I'm pretty sure just hitting 'delete' marks the section of HD as 'overwritable'. Assuming you didn't overwrite it unintentionally, it will still be on the disk. I don't know what to do though.
jammer, that was mean <!--emo&:(--><img src='http://www.unknownworlds.com/forums/html/emoticons/sad.gif' border='0' style='vertical-align:middle' alt='sad.gif'><!--endemo-->
There are a lot of utilities that let you read un-overwritten fat tables to recover data, like GetDataBack (search on google), and rescuedisk. yeah. they're free too.
Comments
First, open the FAT32 table and find where your file was located on the hard disk.
Next, remove your hard drive. Undo the screws on it. You should se lot of disk layers.
Get a magnifying glass. There should be lots of 1 and 0s.
Count up to where your file was.
Copy the 1's and 0's on some paper.
Put your list into notepad and save it as .rmf
There ya go!
Actually, I'm pretty sure just hitting 'delete' marks the section of HD as 'overwritable'. Assuming you didn't overwrite it unintentionally, it will still be on the disk. I don't know what to do though.
There are a lot of utilities that let you read un-overwritten fat tables to recover data, like GetDataBack (search on google), and rescuedisk. yeah. they're free too.