Posted November 23, 2018
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DubConqueror
proud to be a social jus- tice warrior
Registered: Jun 2010
From Netherlands
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Braggadar
Discombobulate
Registered: Mar 2018
From Australia
Posted November 23, 2018
I keep my backups on an external HDD, and secondary backups on DVD.
Fortunately my catalog is mainly games not receiving constant updates, so the DVD throw-out is small.
HDDs/SSDs are tempermental creatures. Long live physical media!
Fortunately my catalog is mainly games not receiving constant updates, so the DVD throw-out is small.
HDDs/SSDs are tempermental creatures. Long live physical media!
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Sam2014
Sams Max
Registered: May 2014
From United States
Posted November 23, 2018
I can relate.
I was trying to format a USB drive from exFAT to NTSF.
I accidently typed C: instead of D: -- formatted my main hard drive.
Luckily I back up to DVD and portable HD.
But the time lost to restoring my programs and files was lost
to a stupid mistake.
I was trying to format a USB drive from exFAT to NTSF.
I accidently typed C: instead of D: -- formatted my main hard drive.
Luckily I back up to DVD and portable HD.
But the time lost to restoring my programs and files was lost
to a stupid mistake.
Post edited November 23, 2018 by Sam2014
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paladin181
Cheese
Registered: Nov 2012
From United States
Posted November 23, 2018
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tiredliger
New User
Registered: Apr 2018
From Samoa
Posted November 23, 2018
I guess you were too quick on the draw with the second Enter. Good thing you had a backup
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kohlrak
One Sooty Birb - Available on DLsite.com, not
Registered: Aug 2014
From United States
Posted November 23, 2018
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Thus my Enter was registered by Windows as "Yes I want to permanently delete the folder GOG - Good Old Games'. Poof, 194GB of game downloads gone and it wasn't to be found in the recycle bin either. Luckily I have a backup HDD and right now I'm putting back all of those 194GB's.
That, my dear GOGlodytes, is why you always should have a backup of your game installers. You never know what might happen.
Post edited November 23, 2018 by kohlrak
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kohlrak
One Sooty Birb - Available on DLsite.com, not
Registered: Aug 2014
From United States
Posted November 23, 2018
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Fortunately my catalog is mainly games not receiving constant updates, so the DVD throw-out is small.
HDDs/SSDs are tempermental creatures. Long live physical media!
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kbnrylaec
Asuka Tanaka
Registered: Nov 2011
From Taiwan
Posted November 23, 2018
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Fortunately my catalog is mainly games not receiving constant updates, so the DVD throw-out is small.
HDDs/SSDs are tempermental creatures. Long live physical media!
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disc_rot
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Oddeus
Pinky and brainy
Registered: Jul 2013
From Germany
Posted November 23, 2018
Check these babies out: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M-DISC
I use them since I learned about them.
I use them since I learned about them.
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mighty.ape.acct
Mightiest Ape
Registered: Aug 2012
From New Zealand
Posted November 23, 2018
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Thus my Enter was registered by Windows as "Yes I want to permanently delete the folder GOG - Good Old Games'. Poof, 194GB of game downloads gone and it wasn't to be found in the recycle bin either. Luckily I have a backup HDD and right now I'm putting back all of those 194GB's.
That, my dear GOGlodytes, is why you always should have a backup of your game installers. You never know what might happen.
It's free (same team behind defraggler and CCleaner) and good at recovering deleted files. When you search it will list files that can be recovered and chances of full recovery (green light next to file name).
I have used it many a time with great success
One important thing to remember, always recover files to a different drive or you'll be overwriting some of the files you're trying to recover!!
Post edited November 23, 2018 by mighty.ape.acct
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DubConqueror
proud to be a social jus- tice warrior
Registered: Jun 2010
From Netherlands
Posted November 23, 2018
I once used an extension to Firefox that saved anything you were typing into the browser, for just such a case. So you could use this extension to put back what you typed after something went wrong posting. But I've forgotten it's name, nor do I know if it's still usable with the new Firefox. Firefox made a major change some time ago, that stopped a lot of old extensions from working (I'm not so tech-savvy to remember what it was that changed).
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Trilarion
New User
Registered: Jul 2010
From Germany
Posted November 23, 2018
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e.g. https://www.minitool.com/data-recovery/recover-permanently-deleted-files.html
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DubConqueror
proud to be a social jus- tice warrior
Registered: Jun 2010
From Netherlands
Posted November 23, 2018
As to Recuva and minitool, I have more faith my backup HDD will have the files complete, than they'll get out of file recovery complete.
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ConsulCaesar
Crossing the Rubicon
Registered: Jan 2017
From Spain
Posted November 23, 2018
I have never used a recovery tool. Should you have it already installed in your PC "just in case" before you actually need to use it, and not after? In other words, does installing the recovery tool potentially overwrites the files you want to recover?
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Themken
Old user
Registered: Nov 2011
From Other
Posted November 23, 2018
Yes, but you must install it to another hard drive, USB stick or CD/DVD/BD if not already present on the system. Also remember to write the recovered files to another HD, USB stick or CD/DVD/BD. Best to not even use the olperating system if the lost files are on the same partition as the OS. I suggest a live OS + recovery program on a disc/stick..
EDIT: I have always (the 2 times I have used it) used a recovery cd.
EDIT: I have always (the 2 times I have used it) used a recovery cd.
Post edited November 23, 2018 by Themken