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Top Ten Data Disaster List - A Look at the Worst Computer Mishaps of 2006

the Worst Computer Mishaps from 2004

Ontrack Data Recovery unveiled their annual Top Ten list of the strangest and funniest computer mishaps experienced by their customers. Ontrack Data Recovery™, the largest, most experienced and most technologically advanced provider of data recovery products and services in the world, has unveiled its annual Top Ten list of remarkable data loss disasters in 2006. Taken from a global poll of Ontrack data recovery experts, this year’s list of data disasters is even more incredible when you consider that in every case cited, Ontrack successfully recovered the data.

 

10. Helicopter Hi-jinks – Employees of a global telecommunications company dropped a laptop computer while working from a helicopter in Monaco. Ontrack successfully retrieved vital files on the laptop and sent them through an FTP server for a meeting in Hong Kong the very next day.

9. Wash the Data Away – On a flight from London to Warsaw, a passenger packed his laptop and toiletries in the same bag. Unfortunately, his shampoo leaked and flooded everything in the bag, including the laptop, causing the hard drive to fail. In order to recover all of the data, Ontrack engineers had to do some washing of their own – cleaning the hard drive and other components in order to get the drive functioning .

8. Not a Jolly Occasion – Comedian Dom Joly, presenter and co-creator of Trigger Happy TV, dropped his laptop, damaging a hard drive that held five thousand photos, six thousand songs, half a book he was writing and all of his old newspaper columns. Having read the tragic story in a newspaper column written by Mr. Joly, Ontrack contacted him and was able to recover everything.

7. Rescuing the Research – A leading UK research university suffered a catastrophic data loss after a fire broke out in the computer science department on a weekend morning, damaging computer equipment with smoke and water from the fire brigade’s efforts. Ontrack was called onsite to rescue thirty computers and recovered more than a terabyte of data.

6. Beware of Bananas – A customer left an old banana on the top of his external hard drive which proceeded to seep its contents into the drive, ruining the circuitry. The drive would no longer run, but Ontrack was able to clean the drive and repair the circuit board so the drive would spin long enough to recover his data. The banana, however, could not be recovered.

5. Hard Drive Speed Bump – It happens every year, but people continue to leave computers and hard drives in the path of moving vehicles. This year alone, Ontrack recovered from a laptop that was run over by a “people mover” at the airport, and several external hard drives stuffed in a rucksack that was backed over by a truck.

4. Tenth Time’s the Charm – A man reformatted his hard drive not once, not twice, but ten times before he realised there was some valuable information he needed recovered. Luckily for him, it only took Ontrack one try to recover the information.

3. Finding Nemo – A customer returned from the holiday of a lifetime in Barbados to discover that he couldn’t access any of the snorkelling photos he took on his new “waterproof” digital camera. It seems the camera wasn’t as waterproof as advertised, so Ontrack had to rescue all of his prized tropical fish photos.

2. Squeaky Drive Gets the Grease – A university professor heard a squeaking noise from the drive of his new desktop computer. To solve the annoying problem, he opened the case and sprayed the inside of the drive with WD-40. Although successful in stopping the drive from squeaking, his actions also prevented the drive from booting up. Ontrack got the drive working again and recovered his data.

And finally, the number one most remarkable data disaster of 2006…

1. Sock it to Me – Although the circumstances of the original data loss were unremarkable, the problem was intensified when the customer shipped his drive to Ontrack in a pair of dirty socks. The old socks didn’t provide the necessary protection during shipping and the resulting damage made the recovery more challenging than normal. Next time, he’ll stick with bubble wrap, but in the meantime, Ontrack successfully recovered his data too.

 

“This list demonstrates that data loss can happen in a number of different ways, whether the cause is a simple accident or the result of extreme user error,” said Phil Bridge, managing director at Ontrack Data Recovery UK. “No matter how catastrophic the situation may seem, it pays to have your hard drive or storage device evaluated by a professional service like Ontrack because chances are good that we’ll be successful in recovering critical data, regardless of how it was lost in the first place.”

 

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Data Recovery

Ontrack DataRecovery Partner Programme
Image of hard drive

Data lost? Back-up failed?

It can happen to anyone at any time.Eventually, everyone who works on a computer will experience some form of data loss. These data loss situations can range from a mechanical failure, software glitch, data corruption, power spike, virus, fire, flood, disgruntled employee, or even a simple user error. As you are probably aware, electronic data has become one of the most valued assets any organisation or individual possesses. Fresh Solutions, together with Ontrack Data Recovery, provides you with the solutions to save precious time and money when a data loss situation occurs.

 

We are official Ontrack Data Recovery Partners. In association with Kroll Ontrack, we can now offer a full range of solutions to address your data loss needs and ensure that you recover from your data loss disasters. Depending on the nature of your data loss situation, your recovery may take place in one of Ontracks labs. Their highly trained engineers can recover data from virtually every operating system, storage device and data loss situation.

How do I recover my data title bar spacer

In most cases, the data really isn't gone; it just can't be accessed. The first thing to do is nothing! In most cases, your data is still on your media; if you attempt to carry out any further work or rescue attempts, you will probably be overwriting the data you are trying to recover.

 

Information you will need to hand:

 

  1. What operating system are you using?
  2. What type of system is the problem occurring on? (Desktop, Laptop, Server, etc.)
  3. What file system are you using? (FAT, NTFS, etc.)
  4. What is the storage capacity of the drive?
  5. Is your system suffering from mechanical problems? I.e. Is the drive spinning, clicking, or grinding? (If yes, In-Lab service is required and you must send in the hard drive.)
  6. How critical or urgent is your data? We will need to work together to select a service level option that best meets your critical deadline needs.
  7. Will this data be used in litigation or other legal matters?

 

Contact us initially to discuss your situation; we may be able to recover your data with a software solution, without the need for sending your equipment to a lab. Alternatively, use the button below to get a quote directly from Ontrack.

 

Say Cheese - Helpful Tips from the World of Digital Photo Recoveries

 

Image of digital cameraThis Christmas, chances are you were snapping up memories using a digital camera instead of film. According to the Photo Marketing Association, digital cameras outsold traditional cameras for the first time ever in 2003 and digital camera penetration was expected to top 42% of households by the end of 2004.

 

With digital cameras predicted to be among the hottest-selling products again this year, more folks will be pointing, clicking and downloading to computers and digital printers than ever before. With that in mind, there are several critical photo housekeeping pointers you'll need to consider since, unlike the foolproof methods for saving and protecting traditional film photographs (i.e. the trusty old shoebox), any kind of digital storage - be it hard disks, CD-ROM, DVD or tapes - can and will eventually fail.

 

The following tips from Ontrack Data Recovery, the world's largest data recovery company, will help your customers keep their memories safe:

 

  • Download as you go - Worse then losing or damaging your digital camera is also losing every last image you took on your family's trip home for the holidays. Periodically (once a month) download new photos to your computer;
  • Back up, back up, back up - Even if you have a monster hard drive, make secondary back ups on DVD, CD-ROM or other medium for extra safety of precious images;
  • Divide and conquer - Keep secondary back up copies in a different location from your primary back up. Preferably, these backups should be located away from your computer to protect against fire/flood;
  • View it or lose it - Check your digital photos at least once a year to be sure they're still readable. Stay current with technology so if in a few years your old computer, camera or media become discontinued or obsolete, you can transfer your photos to newer media before it breaks down;
  • Be kind to media - Storage media is small and fragile, so keep it stored in closed (zippered) compartments that also protect it from bending, flexing or crushing (i.e. your back pants pocket is not a good place to hold extra storage!);
  • Lock and go - If your removable camera media has a "write protect switch," make certain to enable the switch on your media as soon as you remove it from your camera. If your camera allows you to write protect/lock individual photos, this too will provide further safety from accidental data loss;
And perhaps most importantly...
  • You can depend on data recovery - Have the name, Web site and telephone number of a reliable and respected data recovery company on hand. In the event of some form of data meltdown, experts from an experienced data recovery company will be the only thing standing between you and having to tell your children there aren't any memories of your 2004 holidays because your hard drive crashed!
  • If you do find yourself in need of professional recovery services - rest assured, Ontrack has experience saving digital memories.
    How data recovery works title bar spacer

     

    Image of binary numbers reflected on CDA majority of your customers, at one time or another have undergone the frustrating experience of "losing" a critical document(s) -- whether the computer froze, the system was knocked out by a natural disaster or the delete key was hit by mistake. What many don't know is that when a document is lost, it's usually only temporarily missing. It's a matter of having the right tools or working with experts to salvage the information. It's likely that your customers face this type of uncertainty when they experience data loss and come looking to you for assistance. This technical article is a simple discussion of the data recovery basics and can be a great resource for any customer that would like to learn more about exactly how data recovery works.

     

     

    When a file appears lost where does it go? Contrary to what most people think, delete doesn't mean gone and the file doesn't disappear off of the hard drive forever. It's best to think of the computer file as a page in a book. When the file is deleted, that page is not destroyed like it was torn out and put through a shredder. Instead, the table of contents that points out the location of that page is erased. The part that gets erased on your computer is the tiny bit of information that points to the location of the file on the hard drive. Eventually, the hard drive will write new data over the area where the old file is located.

     

    Image of hard driveThe pointer, along with other pointers for every folder and file on the hard drive, is saved in a section near the beginning of the hard drive and is used by the operating system to create the directory tree structure. By erasing the pointer file, the actual file becomes invisible to the operating system, even though it is still there until the file system reuses the space.

     

    The challenge in recovering data is finding the original table of contents which can tell where the files actually exist. Qualified data recovery companies have experienced engineers that can rebuild the file system structure and save those lost files from being overwritten. That said, it's a matter of reaching those hidden places to recover data that appears to be gone forever. Data Recovery providers are often able to recover 100% of the data, but how is it done?

     

    Data recovery is the science of putting the file system back together so that the data files can be accessed. Every operating system has a file system, which is a unique method of indexing and keeping track of the files. Unfortunately for those that lose data, file systems can be very complex, which is why it can be so difficult to locate missing files. For instance, file systems that are used in business environments require security details and access transaction details. A good example is a transaction-based or journaling file system, whose goal is to log when each file is accessed, modified or saved – making the file system more complicated and harder to rebuild.

     

    Causes of data loss - click on image to enlargeThe best data recovery companies have developed proprietary tools to work with all of the main file systems in use today. Recovery engineers are internally trained to work on data recovery, working with computer hardware for a number of years and learning the low-level specifics of every type of file system. Rather than using third-party tools and employing an ‘Auto-fix’ on all of the file system errors to automatically fix the file system, recovery engineers are taught to discover the cause of the file system error and then to fix the file system in the best interests of the data and the client. Many jobs actually require the file system to be repaired by hand.

     

    After the file system is repaired, it is often necessary to repair the internal structure of data files themselves. Like file systems, today's business software data files are incredibly complex as well. In fact, some of the most common files used every day by users are more intricate internally then the file system that is storing the file! This is why it is important that recovery companies have developed file repair software utilities for Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Access, Outlook, and also database recoveries on Microsoft Exchange server and Microsoft SQL server.

     

    Ontrack data recovery labsThere are two phases when a storage device arrives for data recovery. The first phase is the diagnosis. The goal of this phase is to produce a file listing showing all the files that can be recovered. The safest method is to always work on a copy of the client's drive, never working on the original drive. During this stage, recovery engineers can determine if the drive requires special attention from the cleanroom, which is an ultra-clean environment used when working with microscopic components. The cleanroom will work at an electronic and mechanical level to get the drive operational. This can include anything from physically cleaning the disk platters so they can spin properly to swapping out electrical components to power up the drive.

     

    After the drive is operational and a copy of the drive can be made, data recovery engineers work to repair the file structures and produce a complete file listing that shows all of the files and directories on the volume. This file listing will also tell the customer if there are holes (or Input/Output errors) within the file itself. The final phase is the recovery phase. The goal of this phase is to copy out the data and backup that data on media that the customer requires. It is also during this phase that the client can request some of the files to be tested within the lab. For example, on drives that have sustained severe media damage, the customer could ask to have some of the more common files to be tested. The engineer that worked on the job will try to open some of the files and see if the data is present.

     

    Image of business meetingWhen looking at how data recovery works, it's important your customers understand that data recovery is a highly skilled discipline that takes years of practice to establish credentials. Recovering data is made possible by constant research and development, and proficiency with working on storage technology as it is developed. That is why it is so important to work with recovery companies that have experience working across all platforms, media types and operating systems. Knowledgeable engineers that are highly trained and tested have the skills and technical expertise to know how to handle every data recovery job - ensuring you have the means to protect your data and provide you with additional value.