i had been backing up on an external HD fairly regularly last year but the december holiday and january move to my new place kept me preoccupied.
i just know in this field, keeping up to date on technology is expensive and perhaps its just time to sell this machine and buy the next one, even though this was unplanned.
i'm open to ideas -- i just read that VISTA has a back up program built into the OS, sounds nice
Feb-10-2008 18:45
music2dance2
Supreme tranceaddict
Registered: Jul 2001
Location: U.K.
Oh yeh i forgot to say that also. Dont bother with a new pc you have a good one there. Just replace the drive as reno said
Feb-10-2008 18:48
music2dance2
Supreme tranceaddict
Registered: Jul 2001
Location: U.K.
Forget vista for now
Feb-10-2008 18:48
Reno
Senior tranceaddict
Registered: Nov 2007
Location: London
Yeah Vista has 2 backup features - normal backup (only data) and image backup (which backs up a full image incl OS). You only want to be doing an image backup on the odd occassion as it takes ages and lots of disk space.
Download the Windows 2003 resource kit from MS site which will install robocopy. Create a batch file that backs up your important folders to your drive using robocopy. Its great for backing up only new data. Once the batch file is created you simply double click to run it. Even easier than Vista
By the way Vista should run pretty well on a dual core pc even with 1GB RAM although I'd go to 2GB min. I wouldn't say its a bad thing upgrading cause you will need to sooner or later. For me though, Cubase 4 keeps crashing.
I feel sorry for you Anthony. For real. That shit happened to me 1 week ago! I lost all my samples, and the newer versions of my tracks that were supposed to be released. Now I only have the older versions. Also I lost and some melodies that were trully a masterpieces. But slowly this week I remembered some of them and rewrited them, and I also reinstalled the samples and programs. Maybe something good can come out from that. You might do even better later. Good luck with solving the problems.
Feb-10-2008 19:14
DJ RANN
Supreme tranceaddict
Registered: May 2001
Location: Hollywood....
quote:
Originally posted by Zombie0729
i had been backing up on an external HD fairly regularly last year but the december holiday and january move to my new place kept me preoccupied.
i just know in this field, keeping up to date on technology is expensive and perhaps its just time to sell this machine and buy the next one, even though this was unplanned.
i'm open to ideas -- i just read that VISTA has a back up program built into the OS, sounds nice
Anthony, what actually is the problem with the drive? Will it not even spin/power up/corrupted/etc?
I had a drive that was totally corrupted and went to a "recovery expert" for "help" (made him inspect it before he was going to get any cash from me) and he couldn't retrieve anything so I got the drive back. In the end I found the suggestions in this thread useful:
In the end I only got back about 40% but that was because I think the "expert" did some more damage to it.
Whatever you do, don't try to restore the disk back to itself - get another drive, install XP (or whatever on to it) and see if the dead drive is recognised when you plug it in.
If not, you might want to see if you can get a quote to just do a mechanical fix on it (or exchange parts like Echosystem suggested) and then do the software data recovery yourself, as that will work a out a lot cheaper than a complete data recovery service (who will basically be doing an electrical/mechanical repair then running data recovery software).
Feb-10-2008 19:53
Zombie0729
Supreme tranceaddict
Registered: Oct 2003
Location: .
well, i was doing like 10 things at once when all of the sudden my computer completly froze, like nothing thats ever happened before. i had to hard boot in order for anything to even happen. on boot up i got an error in bios that said "BOOT DISK FAILURE".. went into bios and it didn't recognize anything in the master slot.
checked the cables and nothing, when it was trying to read from the master slot the drive would click. when i called into one of the recovery places they told me the clicking is either a broken head or the tone arm flying across the platter striking it at the end.
i did find a place that will give me a FREE evaluation and then tell me how much they can recover... i'll be bringing that in tomorrow.
thx for the advice guys but if i don't upgrade now i probably won't for another year and by then my computer will be pretty out dated.
Feb-10-2008 21:00
DJ RANN
Supreme tranceaddict
Registered: May 2001
Location: Hollywood....
That sounds like a mechanical failure of the drive components and actually your data is probably still intact on the disk surface. If the parts can be replaced to make it read again the data will almost certainly be recoverable.
Just make sure the guys doing the evaluation are only going to do non destructive testing on it.
Good Luck!!!!!!!!
Feb-10-2008 21:17
mysticalninja
Supreme tranceaddict
Registered: May 2005
Location: Los Angeles
have u tried GetDataBack and the others like it? lol
I thought that but if the drive is fucked no point!
Feb-10-2008 22:47
kopi_luwak
K.O. 3.14159265
Registered: Aug 2004
Location: Your Moms Bed ...
2000 bucks to recover your data?
Dude, does this service includes time traveling to warn you in the past about to back up your hard drive or sort of?
Otherwize is crazy!
Kopi =o.
___________________
My forum for Down Tempo/Ambient/Chillout Music Producers. www.chilloutworld.com
Where the world spins sligthly slower ...
Feb-10-2008 23:15
CReddick
balls
Registered: Apr 2005
Location: Los Angeles (Burbank), CA
Anthony,
I had a drive that quit spinning up (mechanical failure) and I put it in the freezer for 24 hours, then plugged it in and it worked fine. Long enough to clone it at least. A bad ball bearing will contract when cold and allow the disc to function. in case this is your issue, it's an easy try / solution.