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 | Downloads: Bad sectors & damaged media recovery utilities |  |
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| AnyReader - Effectively copies corrupt data from any type of disks or erroneous connections if stand |
AnyReader supports resumed downloads from the remote PC if the connection was broken during the copy process (especially useful for unreliable Wi-Fi networks).
AnyReader is great for copying files from scratched CD/DVDs or defective floppy/hard disks. Normally when your computer is unable to copy files from a damaged disk it will abort and delete the part of the file it has copied. AnyReader will continue copying the file right to the end; any data that hasn't been recovered after several retries is replaced with blanks. This will allow you to effectively read every byte of information that can be read at all.
Here are some situations where AnyReader can help:
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Your CD/DVD drive can't read your bad, scratched or trashed disks;
* The standard copying method fails because of an error, such as "(Bad CRC) A cyclic redundancy check (CRC) checksum error occurred", "Cannot read from the source file or disk", an unknown error or a bad disk;
* You have 2 bad copies of a file that you would like to put right;
* You can't download a file across wireless LAN because of a bad connection;
* And many more of those...
Note: Using AnyReader is safe and risk-free. The software does not write data to your original disks, but saves the recovered data to a new folder that you specify. |
| License: Commercial |
O/S: Win |
Version: 1.6 |
| Added: 15.07.06 |
Downloads: 394 |
Download (2.047MB) |

| The DiskExercizer program is used to exercise a new disk for bad blocks |
The DiskExercizer program is used to exercise a new disk, stressing the weak regions of the medium so that bad blocks collapse and get entered into the Bad Block Table of the device. It should be used before installing valuable information onto the disk. This program runs on formatted disks, and it can be used to exercise the disk at any point in the life of the disk.
Most modern disk drives manage their own lists of bad blocks internally. As the drive writes data to the medium, it checks for errors. When a block misbehaves enough, it is added to the Bad Block Table, and it is not used again for data storage.
A new disk will have obvious bad blocks, which the manufacturer will catch in its initial ``burn-in.'' However, there are also weak blocks which will fail eventually, but maybe not before you install an Operating System or a database over them and use it a while.
Hammering away at a new disk with DiskExercizer will catch the bad blocks that have surfaced in shipping and sitting on the shelf, and it will uncover the weak ones before valuable data is put on them. |
| License: Commercial |
O/S: Win |
Version: |
| Added: 14.07.06 |
Downloads: 378 |
Download (0.275MB) |
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